This course is available as an outside option to students on other programmes where regulations permit and to General Course students. This course cannot be taken with EC1A3 Microeconomics I. This ...
Corts, Kenneth S., and Jan W. Rivkin. "A Note on Microeconomics for Strategists." Harvard Business School Background Note 799-128, March 1999. (Revised January 2000.) ...
We are not currently accepting applications for this course. Register your interest below to be notified when applications open again. Microeconomics aims to understand the behaviour of individuals ...
The Causes and Consequences of Interest Theory. p. 67. ‘The McKenzie/Lee text is the best book in its field, both for coverage and readability. The text is an excellent example of how microeconomic ...
Merton, Robert C. "On the Microeconomic Theory of Investment under Uncertainty." In Handbook of Mathematical Economics. Vol. 2, edited by K. Arrow and M. Intriligator. Amsterdam: North-Holland ...
Enabling Stakeholder Involvement in Coastal Disaster Resilience Planning. Risk Analysis, Vol. 37, Issue. 6, p. 1181. This book provides a concise treatment of the core concepts of microeconomic theory ...
The Applied Microeconomics research group draws on expertise in field experiments and in the development and analysis of large-scale microdata to address questions of real-world policy relevance. Our ...
The Development Research Group is the World Bank's principal research department. With its cross-cutting expertise on a broad range of topics and countries, the department is one of the most ...
Independent hospitals can receive efficiency and profitability boosts from acquisitions. However, buyouts don’t continue to boost operating metrics for corporate-owned hospitals, according to a new ...
In general, if a student has taken Principles of Microeconomics course OR a Principles of Macroeconomics course, it will count as one course towards the Social Science Core requirement but it will not ...
Marginal benefit represents one of the most basic concepts of microeconomics. This is the value, or satisfaction, that an economic actor gains from consuming additional units of a particular good.