ECONOMICS 212 – SECTION 001 MICROECONOMIC THEORY Fall, 2012 Instructor: Office: Email: Phone: Art Stewart Dunning Hall, Room 331 stewarta@econ.queensu.ca 613-533-2283 Office Hours: Tuesday 11:30-12:30; Thursday 10-11; by appointment Textbook and Other Resources The textbook for the course is Microeconomics by David Besanko and Ronald Brauetigam. This book and the accompanying study guide are available in the bookstore. You may find additional resources at the publisher’s website, www.wiley.com/college/besanko. Other materials may be referenced as we proceed through the course. Grading Student grades will be based on three sets of work: 1) A three-hour final exam worth 50% to be scheduled by the Exams Office during the December exam period. 2) A midterm exam worth 30% to be held in class on Monday, October 22. 3) A set of five open-book quizzes to be held during the last 25 minutes of class, beginning on Monday, September 24. A full schedule of the quizzes is included below. Your four highest quiz scores will count for 20% of your grade. Missed quizzes will not be made up for any reason. If you have a legitimate and documented reason for missing a quiz, please speak to me about alternative arrangements. Please note that all graded work, with the exception of the final exam, will be returned through an office set up for this purpose. You must show your student card to pick up your work. Details will follow in class. Exam and Quiz Schedule Quiz 1 September 24 Quiz 2 October 15 Midterm October 22 Quiz 3 October 29 Quiz 4 November 12 Quiz 5 November 26 Other Stuff The course has a head TA who is responsible for coordinating grading activities and office hours for other TAs, and maintaining the course website. The name and coordinates of the head TA will be announced in class and posted on the website, along with those of the four other TAs. The remaining four TAs are responsible for grading quizzes and the midterm. All TAs will hold regular office hours to respond to grading inquiries. These office hours will be posted on the website early in the term. The website address is http://qed.econ.queensu.ca/pub/undergrad/212.html. The website contains important announcements, and past quizzes and midterms. Academic Integrity Academic integrity is constituted by the five core fundamental values of honesty, trust, fairness, respect and responsibility (see http://www.academicintegrity.org/fundamental_values_project/index.php). These values are central to the building, nurturing and sustaining of an academic community in which all members of the community will thrive. Adherence to the values expressed through academic integrity forms a foundation for the "freedom of inquiry and exchange of ideas" essential to the intellectual life of the University (see the Senate Report on Principles and Priorities) Students are responsible for familiarizing themselves with the regulations concerning academic integrity and for ensuring that their assignments conform to the principles of academic integrity. Information on academic integrity is available in the Arts and Science Calendar (see Academic Regulation 1), on the Arts and Science website (see http://www.queensu.ca/artsci/academics/academic-integrity), and from the instructor of this course. Departures from academic integrity include plagiarism, use of unauthorized materials, facilitation, forgery and falsification, and are antithetical to the development of an academic community at Queen's. Given the seriousness of these matters, actions which contravene the regulation on academic integrity carry sanctions that can range from a warning or the loss of grades on an assignment to the failure of a course to a requirement to withdraw from the university. Course Outline and Readings Chapter 1 – entire chapter Students are responsible for reading this chapter Chapter 2 – pages 28-57 Covers the basics of supply and demand and elasticity Chapter 3 – entire chapter Preferences and utility, the basis of consumer theory Chapter 4 – pages 103-131 Consumer choice through constrained optimization problems Chapter 5 – pages 150-173 and pages 182-184 Derivation of demand functions and consumption-leisure choice problems Chapter 15 – pages 604-626 Consumer choice in the presence of risk and an introduction to insurance Chapter 6 – entire chapter Production functions Chapter 7 – entire chapter Costs and cost minimization Chapter 8 – pages 285-309 Cost curves in the long run and the short run Covered very quickly in class with most of the chapter for student reading Chapter 9 – pages 327-366 Perfectly competitive markets Chapter 10 – entire chapter Applications of competitive markets to policy issues A few sample problems will be done in class, but the chapter is mostly left for student reading Chapter 11 – pages 438-450 and pages 458-462 Basics of monopoly Chapter 13 – pages 528-546 Basics of oligopoly Chapter 14 – entire chapter Introduction to game theory