Intermediate Microeconomics: A Tool-Building Approach

This document was uploaded by one of our users. The uploader already confirmed that they had the permission to publish it. If you are author/publisher or own the copyright of this documents, please report to us by using this DMCA report form.

Simply click on the Download Book button.

Yes, Book downloads on Ebookily are 100% Free.

Sometimes the book is free on Amazon As well, so go ahead and hit "Search on Amazon"

Intermediate Microeconomics: A Tool-Building Approach is a clear and concise calculus-based exposition of current microeconomic theory that is essential for students pursuing degrees in economics or business. The second edition explicitly incorporates constrained optimization techniques. This beautifully presented and accessible text covers all the essential topics typically required at the intermediate level, from consumer and producer theory to the market structures of perfect competition, monopoly, duopoly, and oligopoly. Other topics include general equilibrium, risk, and game theory, as well as chapters on externalities, asymmetric information, and public goods.

Through numerical examples as well as exercises, the book aims to teach microeconomic theory via a process of learning-by-doing. When there is a skill to be acquired, a list of steps outlining the procedure is provided, followed by an example to illustrate how this procedure is carried out. Once learned, students will be able to solve similar problems and be well on their way to mastering the skills needed for future study.

Intermediate Microeconomics presents a large amount of material in a concise way, without sacrificing rigor or clarity of exposition. Through use of this text, students will acquire both the analytical toolkit and theoretical foundation necessary in order to take upper-level field courses in economics, such as industrial organization, international trade, and public finance.

Author(s): Samiran Banerjee
Edition: 2
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2021

Language: English
Pages: 390

Half Title
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication Page
Contents
Preface
Acknowledgements
1 Markets
1.1 Market Demand and Supply
1.2 Determinants of Demand and Supply
1.3 Market Interventions
1.4 Elasticities
2 Budgets
2.1 Commodity Space
2.2 Competitive Budgets
2.3 Changes in Prices or Income
2.4 Non-Competitive Budgets
3 Preferences
3.1 Binary Relations
3.2 Properties of Binary Relations
3.3 Utility Representation of Preferences
3.4 Types of Preferences
3.5 The Notion of Utility
3.6 Utility, Preferences, and Properties
3.7 Special Topics°
4 Individual Demands
4.1 Preference Maximization on Budgets
4.2 Calculating Individual Demands
4.3 Two Properties of Demand Functions
5 Consumer Comparative Statics
5.1 Price and Income Consumption Curves
5.2 Individual Elasticities of Demand
5.3 Decomposing Price Effects
6 Exchange Economies
6.1 The Edgeworth Box
6.2 Properties of Allocations
6.3 Walras Equilibrium
6.4 Allowing for More Goods or Consumers
6.5 Walras’ Law and the Welfare Theorems°
7 Technology
7.1 Production Functions and Productivity
7.2 Types of Technologies
7.3 Returns to Scale
7.4 Production Possibility Frontiers
8 Costs
8.1 Cost Functions: The One-input Case
8.2 Cost Functions: The Two-inputs Case
8.3 Calculating Cost Functions
8.4 Cost Concepts
8.5 Returns to Scale Revisited
8.6 Cost Functions with Multiple Technologies°
8.7 Deriving Technologies Underlying Cost Functions°
9 Competitive Firms
9.1 Defining Profits
9.2 Short-Run Profit Maximization
9.3 Shifts in a Firm’s Supply
9.4 Perfect Competition in the Long Run
10 Monopoly
10.1 Uniform Pricing
10.2 Differential Pricing
10.3 Personalized Pricing
10.4 Group Pricing
10.5 Menu Pricing: Unit-demand Bundling
11 Risk
11.1 Expected Utility
11.2 Attitudes towards Risk
11.3 Stochastic Dominance°
11.4 Pareto Efficient Risk Sharing
12 Game Theory
12.1 Static Games
12.2 Solving Static Games
12.3 Dynamic Games
13 Oligopoly
13.1 Static Quantity Competition
13.2 Static Price Competition
13.3 Dynamic Competition
14 Externalities
14.1 Market Inefficiencies
14.2 Three “Solutions”
15 Asymmetric Information
15.1 Hidden Action
15.2 Hidden Information
16 Public Goods
16.1 The Kolm Triangle
16.2 Lindahl Equilibrium
16.3 Voluntary Contribution Mechanism°
Mathematical Appendix
A.1 Functions
A.2 Single Variable Calculus Review
A.3 Concave and Convex Functions
A.4 Single Variate Optimization
A.5 Multivariate Calculus
A.6 Multivariate Optimization
A.7 Constrained Optimization
A.8 Miscellanea
Selected Answers
Index