Temple University
Economics 1902

Principles of Microeconomics

 Spring 2009

Course Description

 

Microeconomics is the study of the behavior of individual economics agents.  The basic concepts that every course starts with are opportunity cost and the model of supply and demand.  We will review these two topics.  Traditional courses then go on and talk about consumer behavior and the mapping to demand curves.  The next topic is production and costs of the firm.  Demand and the theory of the firm are brought back together again to model price and output decisions of firms in different market structures.  Time permitting, the traditional course ends with topics that may include international trade, market failure, and/or welfare and general equilibrium.  In intermediate microeconomic theory, Economics 201, the same topics are covered again with a bit more abstraction.

 

In order to spare you the repetition our course will be somewhat different.  After reviewing production possibilities frontiers and the supply-demand paradigm we will study the strategic behavior of economic agents using mathematical games.  We will begin with the simplest of all games, the prisoner’s dilemma, and learn about its representation as either a normal form game or an extensive form game.  We will work with games that involve simultaneous moves those that involve sequential moves.  We will talk about formulating a strategy for playing a game.  We will introduce some notions of equilibrium so that we can characterize the outcomes of games.   Throughout there will be applications to every day events in life, industry and politics.

 

Some scholars in the area of game theory and strategic behavior have developed software, called GAMBIT, for solving games.  This is freeware that you will need to download and put on a computer that you commonly use.

 

We probably will not use any calculus, but you should be confident of your algebra skills.  We won’t review the rules of algebra.  However, I will introduce you to probability.  Some of you may have seen this already and you can help your peers who have not.