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Intermediate Microeconomics: Microeconomics of the Household (ECON0014)

Key information

Faculty
Faculty of Social and Historical Sciences
Teaching department
Economics
Credit value
15
Restrictions
Suitable for: BASc students - Science Pathway (Y000 & Y001). Affiliate students may take ECON0014 with the permission of the Affiliate Student Tutor but are advised to check with their home university that the single term option will fulfill the right requirement in their home degree program. Prerequisites: ECON0002 or introductory microeconomics at an equivalent level, ECON0010 or introductory calculus at an equivalent level.
Timetable

Alternative credit options

This module is offered in several versions which have different credit weightings (e.g. either 15 or 30 credits). Please see the links below for the alternative versions. To choose the right one for your programme of study, check your programme handbook or with your department.

  1. Microeconomics (ECON0013)
  2. Intermediate Microeconomics: Microeconomics of the Firm (ECON0015)

Description

Aims: To provide students with a thorough understanding of core concepts and methods of microeconomics, as a foundation for subsequent study of microeconomic topics within the degree programme, and as one of the key elements in the professional training of an economist.

Suitable for: BASc students - Science Pathway (Y000 & Y001). Affiliate students may take ECON0014 with the permission of the Affiliate Student Tutor but are advised to check with their home university that the single term option will fulfill the right requirement in their home degree program.

Prerequisites: ECON0002 or introductory microeconomics at an equivalent level, ECON0010 or introductory calculus at an equivalent level.

Assumed knowledge: We expect students to have some familiarity with the main concepts of microeconomic theory as follows: consumer theory, utility maximisation, demand for goods, labour supply, savings, risk; producer theory, input demands, cost, profit; supply and demand, economic equilibrium, competition, monopoly, oligopoly; welfare, Pareto efficiency, conflicts of interests, inequality; game theory.
We also expect students to be competent in calculus of one and many variables including differentiation, integration and constrained optimisation, to be comfortable with linear algebra including use of vector and matrix notation, and to have come across concepts of homogeneity and convexity.

Module deliveries for 2024/25 academic year

Intended teaching term: Term 2 ÌýÌýÌý Undergraduate (FHEQ Level 5)

Teaching and assessment

Mode of study
In person
Methods of assessment
60% Exam
40% In-class activity
Mark scheme
Numeric Marks

Other information

Number of students on module in previous year
2
Module leader
Professor Ian Preston
Who to contact for more information
economics.ug@ucl.ac.uk

Last updated

This module description was last updated on 19th August 2024.

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