MICROECONOMICS - 2
- Academic year
- 2025/2026 Syllabus of previous years
- Official course title
- MICROECONOMICS - 2
- Course code
- ET2020 (AF:561634 AR:324510)
- Teaching language
- English
- Modality
- On campus classes
- ECTS credits
- 6 out of 12 of MICROECONOMICS
- Degree level
- Bachelor's Degree Programme
- Academic Discipline
- SECS-P/01
- Period
- 4th Term
- Course year
- 1
- Where
- VENEZIA
Contribution of the course to the overall degree programme goals
Expected learning outcomes
1. Knowledge and comprehension:
1.1. Understanding how families and firms take economic decisions and interact in different market structures to determine the equilibrium price and quantity;
1.2. Understanding the consequences in terms of efficiency of policy interventions in markets;
1.3. Identifying the main characteristics of different market structures and implications for firms' behavior.
2. Ability to apply knowledge and comprehension:
2.1. Applying the demand and supply model to determine changes in the market equilibrium conditions;
2.2. Being able to analyze individual choices of consumers and workers as well as firms' choices, by using marginal analysis and the concept of opportunity cost;
2.3. Evaluating the overall welfare of different equilibria and how it varies after policy interventions and across different market structures;
2.4. Distinguishing acrss different situations of individual decision making and strategic interaction.
3. Judging capacity:
3.1. Interpreting in economic terms prices and well functioning of markets;
3.2. Understanding how using economic models can provide insight to economists;
3.3. Drawing conclusions on economic events by using the analytical approach.
Pre-requirements
Contents
Introduction to the Study of Microeconomics
1. Preliminaries: what are we going to study in microeconomics?
2. Demand and Supply and the concept of elasticity
Theory of Firm
3. Inputs, technology and production
4. Costs
5. Profit Maximization
Consumer Theory
6. Preferences
7. Constraints, choices and demand
8. Comparative statics, demand and welfare
9. An application to the labor supply
10. Choice involving time
The following is the preliminary program for Microeconomics-2.
Competitive Markets
11. Price-taking firm and supply curve
12. Market demand and market supply of a competitive market
13. Equilibrium of a competitive market and efficiency
Market Interventions
14. Taxes and subsidies
15. Import tariffs and quotas
Monopoly and Pricing Policies
16. Monopoly
17. Pricing Policies
Game Theory
18. Simultaneous and sequential games and the concept of Nash equilibrium
Oligopoly
19. Oligopoly a la Bertrand, Cournot and Stackelberg; Collusion
Asymmetric information (if feasible, given time constraints)
20. Adverse selection; Moral hazard
Referral texts
Bernheim, B. D., and Whinston, M. D., 2008, Microeconomics McGraw-Hill/Irwin, Inc. New York, NY.
Varian, Hal R., 2014, Intermediate Microeconomics with Calculus, W.W. Norton, New York, NY.
Additional references:
Besanko, D., and Braeutigam, R. R.,2014, Microeconomics, 5th Edition, International Student Version, John Wiley & Sons, Chichester, WestSussex, UK.
Perloff, Jeffrey, 2014, Microeconomics with Calculus, 3rd ed., Global Edition, Pearson, Upper Saddle River, NJ.
Additional teaching material will be available on the course website at: http://moodle.unive.it/course/view.php?id=490 .
Assessment methods
The total duration of the exam is 100 minutes. Students who have successfully completed the first partial exam related to the first module of the course will have the opportunity to take a second partial exam during the first official exam session, which includes the full exam.
The final grade will also take into account the weekly exercises assigned by the instructor.
Type of exam
Grading scale
- sufficient knowledge of the main content of the program;
- limited ability to solve exercises;
B. Grades within 23 and 26 will be assigned in case of:
- discrete knowledge of the main content of the program;
- discrete ability to solve exercises;
C. Grades within 27 and 30 will be assigned in case of:
- good or optimal knowledge of the main content of the program;
- good or optimal ability to solve exercises, elaborate and interpret its results, also providing a critical view on them
D. 30 cum laude is assigned when the student shows excellent abilities to handle the content of the program of the course, ability to solve exercise and proof of excellent critical thinking.