Course Detail (Course Description By Faculty)

Microeconomics (33001)

This course introduces the fundamental concepts, models & theories of microeconomics. The goal is to enable you to think like an economist: to frame problems in economic terms, to propose solutions that address the central issues and to assess the tradeoffs. The course emphasizes three general lessons. First, many fundamental insights on how & why markets function the way they do can be obtained using a supply & demand model. Second, incentives & constraints tell us quite a lot about why consumers, firms and organizations make the decisions they do. Third, efficiency is a very useful criterion for comparing alternative markets & institutions.
It is assumed that you have a working knowledge of basic calculus & algebra. All Non-Booth students require instructor consent.
The required readings include chapters from a textbook and articles from magazines and newspapers.
Course grades are based on problem sets, a mid-term exam, and a final exam. Cannot be taken pass/fail. No provisional grades. No auditors. No non-Booth students.
  • No auditors
  • No pass/fail grades
Description and/or course criteria last updated: April 24 2024
SCHEDULE
  • Summer 2024
    Section: 33001-81
    M 6:00 PM-9:00 PM
    Gleacher Center
    404
    In-Person Only
  • Summer 2024
    Section: 33001-85
    S 1:30 PM-4:30 PM
    Gleacher Center
    404
    In-Person Only

Microeconomics (33001) - Shivakumar, Ram>>

This course introduces the fundamental concepts, models & theories of microeconomics. The goal is to enable you to think like an economist: to frame problems in economic terms, to propose solutions that address the central issues and to assess the tradeoffs. The course emphasizes three general lessons. First, many fundamental insights on how & why markets function the way they do can be obtained using a supply & demand model. Second, incentives & constraints tell us quite a lot about why consumers, firms and organizations make the decisions they do. Third, efficiency is a very useful criterion for comparing alternative markets & institutions.
It is assumed that you have a working knowledge of basic calculus & algebra. All Non-Booth students require instructor consent.
The required readings include chapters from a textbook and articles from magazines and newspapers.
Course grades are based on problem sets, a mid-term exam, and a final exam. Cannot be taken pass/fail. No provisional grades. No auditors. No non-Booth students.
  • No auditors
  • No pass/fail grades
Description and/or course criteria last updated: April 24 2024
SCHEDULE
  • Summer 2024
    Section: 33001-81
    M 6:00 PM-9:00 PM
    Gleacher Center
    404
    In-Person Only
  • Summer 2024
    Section: 33001-85
    S 1:30 PM-4:30 PM
    Gleacher Center
    404
    In-Person Only