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Microeconomics is a social science that studies how individuals respond to changes in incentives, prices, resources, and/or methods of production. What Is Microeconomics? Microeconomics studies ...
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, EC100 ...
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.) ...
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 ...
Microeconomics is the subfield of economics that studies how economic decisions are made on the level of individual people or firms, as well as phenomena affecting those decisions. What Is the ...
Studies the principles of production and exchange. An introduction to demand, supply, pricing, and output under alternative market structures. Derived demand and resource markets are introduced. Meets ...
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 ...
We examine the impact of encouragement emails sent to high-performing students in a principles of microeconomics course at a large state university, aimed at motivating them to take additional ...
Bresnahan, Timothy, and Shane Greenstein. "Technical Progress and Co-Invention in Computing and in the Use of Computers." Brookings Papers on Economic Activity. Microeconomics (1996): 1–78.
Research in the Applied Micro group spans a number of areas, from labour economics to health economics, political economy and economic development. Studies in this area have addressed central issues ...
There’s foolish and then there’s macroeconomics. Macroeconomics insults foolish. Was “economics” always this dense?