EC319
Games and Economic Behaviour
This information is for the 2024/25 session.
Teacher responsible
Dr Andrew Ellis SAL 3.15
Dr Christopher Sandmann SAL.4.24
Availability
This course is available on the BSc in Econometrics and Mathematical Economics, BSc in Economics, BSc in Mathematics and Economics, BSc in Mathematics with Economics, BSc in Mathematics, Statistics and Business and BSc in Philosophy and Economics. This course is available with permission as an outside option to students on other programmes where regulations permit. This course is not available to General Course students.
Pre-requisites
Students must have completed Microeconomic Principles I (EC201) or Microeconomic Principles II (EC202) or Microeconomics II (EC2A1) or Microeconomics II (EC2A3), or equivalent. Fluency in calculus is essential, and some knowledge of analysis, probability theory, linear algebra and set theory is advantageous.
Course content
This course reviews fundamental concepts in economic theory and presents some of its most successful applications. The first part of the course will survey concepts in non-cooperative game theory and will introduce students to game theoretic modelling in economics. After setting up the primitives of the game theory framework, different solution concepts will be analysed with an emphasis on economic applications including bargaining, voting, communication, and matching.
The second part of the course traces the ‘game theory revolution’ in economics whereby game theory has become the dominant paradigm in applied fields. The course will cover contract theory (lectures 1-2), auction theory (lecture 3-7), and banking and corporate finance (lecture 8-10). Topics may include: the hold-up problem; menu pricing with an application to income taxation (contract theory); the VCG mechanism, revenue equivalence theorem and revenue-maximising auctions; the drainage tract model; the linkage principle (auction theory); credit rationing and screening; incomplete contracts (why do banks exist?); moral hazard and renegotiation in start-ups.
Teaching
15 hours of lectures and 10 hours of classes in the AT. 15 hours of lectures and 9 hours of classes in the WT. 1 hour of classes in the ST.
There will be a reading week in Week 6 of WT (no lectures or classes that week).
This course is delivered through a combination of classes and lectures totalling a minimum of 50 hours across Autumn Term, Winter Term and Spring Term.