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microeconomics ii an introduction to game theory and general equilibrium professors antonio cabrales andreu mas colell ta michal pozarzycki michael schreibweis winter 2005 contact information email antonio cabrales upf edu ...

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                                                           MICROECONOMICS  II: 
                                          An introduction to game theory and general equilibrium 
                                                                                         
                                                Professors: Antonio Cabrales, Andreu Mas-Colell 
                                                   TA: Michal Pozarzycki, Michael Schreibweis 
                                                                              Winter 2005 
                          Contact Information 
                               •     Email: antonio.cabrales@upf.edu      
                               •     Phone: 93 542 2765  
                               •     Fax: 93 542 1746  
                               •     Website: http://www.econ.upf.es/%7Ecabrales/  
                               •     Office: Jaume I 204  
                               •     Office hours: Tuesday 11-13 or by appointment. 
                                
                               •     Email: andreu.mas-colell@upf.edu  
                               •     Phone: 93 542 2058  
                               •     Fax: 93 542 1746  
                               •     Website: http://www.econ.upf.es/~mcolell 
                               •     Office: Jaume I 215  
                               •     Office hours: TBA 
                          Textbooks 
                               •     Fudenberg and Tirole. Game Theory, The MIT Press 1991. 
                               •                                          A Course in Game Theory, The MIT Press 1994. 
                                     Osborne and Rubintein. 
                               •     Vega-Redondo. Economics and the Theory of Games, Cambridge University 
                                     Press 2002. 
                               •     Hildenbrand and Kirman. Equilibrium Analysis. North-Holland, 1988. 
                               •     Starr. General Equilibrium Theory: An Introduction, New York: Cambridge 
                                     University Press, 1997.  
                               •     Mas-Colell, Whinston and Green, Microeconomic Theory, Oxford 1995.  
                          Aims and Scope 
                           
                           The objective of this course is the analysis of how individuals (optimal) decisions 
                          interact between themselves. In this sense, it is a fitting continuation of Microeconomics 
                          I, which studied individual decision-making. The first part of the course is devoted to 
                          game theory and the second to general equilibrium. The main difference is that in game 
                          theory an individual has a noticeable impact on the aggregate outcome, whereas in 
                          general equilibrium a single decision-maker cannot affect the aggregate situation.  
                           
                           
        Approximate schedule (by weeks) 
         
        1. Preliminaries.  
           Definitions of a game: players, strategies and payoffs. 
           Representing a game: the strategic form and the extensive form. 
           Strict and weak dominance: prisoners’ dilemma, the beauty contest. 
         
        2. Nash equilibrium.  
           Existence: fixed point theorems. 
           Nash equilibrium as a positive analysis tool: oligopoly. 
           Nash equilibrium as a normative analysis tool: implementation. 
         
        3. Subgame perfect equilibrium. 
           Incredible threats and small irrationalities. 
           Subgame perfect equilibrium as a positive analysis tool: bargaining. 
           Subgame perfect equilibrium as a normative analysis tool: King Solomon’s 
           dilemma. 
         
        4. Incomplete information.  
           Bayesian-Nash equilibrium.  
           Bayesian-Nash equilibrium as a positive-normative analysis tool: Auctions. 
            
        5. Dynamic games.  
           Folk theorems: repeated games between patient players.  
           Dynamic games of incomplete information: signalling and Bayesian-perfection.  
         
        6. The economic environment of General Equilibrium Theory. 
           Agents and preferences, the budget set, demand and excess demand functions. 
           Technological limits: production sets. 
            
        7. The concept of Walrasian price taking equilibrium. 
           Definition. Walsarian Equilibrium as a type of Nash equilibrium. Fixed points  
           revisited. An equilibrium existence Theorem. The futile search for uniqueness. 
            
            
        8. The Welfare Properties of Walrasian Equilibrium. 
           Under a complete market hypothesis, a Walrasian equilibrium is Pareto optimal.  
           Under convexity hypothesis any Pareto optimal allocation can be made  
           Walrasian.  A related result: the core equivalence theorem. 
            
        9. Market Failure. 
           Externalities. Market Incompleteness. 
         
        10. Beyond Walrasian Theory: back to games. 
           The role of non-convexities, particularly of increasing returns. 
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...Microeconomics ii an introduction to game theory and general equilibrium professors antonio cabrales andreu mas colell ta michal pozarzycki michael schreibweis winter contact information email upf edu phone fax website http www econ es ecabrales office jaume i hours tuesday or by appointment mcolell tba textbooks fudenberg tirole the mit press a course in osborne rubintein vega redondo economics of games cambridge university hildenbrand kirman analysis north holland starr new york whinston green microeconomic oxford aims scope objective this is how individuals optimal decisions interact between themselves sense it fitting continuation which studied individual decision making first part devoted second main difference that has noticeable impact on aggregate outcome whereas single maker cannot affect situation approximate schedule weeks preliminaries definitions players strategies payoffs representing strategic form extensive strict weak dominance prisoners dilemma beauty contest nash exi...

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