This is a standard text for upper level undergraduate/postgraduate microeconomics.
The book begins at the intermediate level and ends at a level appropriate for the graduate student. Updated and revised, this is a new edition of one of the best-selling advanced microeconomics texts to be published in Europe. This well informed book provides a comprehensive exposition of modern microeconomic theory, covering many of the issues currently being researched and debated. The book offers very rigorous, mathematical treatment of the topics discussed making it appropriate for graduate as well as able intermediate level students. The writing style is clear and concise and the book is particularly liked for the thoroughness with which the concepts are dealt.
Preface
1 The nature and scope of microeconomics
A Concepts and methods
B The economic and social framework
2 The theory of the consumer
A The preference ordering
B The feasible set
C The consumption decision
D The comparative statics of consumer behaviour
E Offer curves and net demand curves
Appendix 1 : The lexicographic ordering
Appendix 2 : Existence of a utility function
3 Consumer theory : duality
A The expenditure function
B The indirect utility function, Roy's identity and the Slutsky equation
C Measuring the benefits of price changes
D Composite commodities, separability and homotheticity
4 Further models of consumer behaviour
A Revealed preference
B The consumer as a labour supplier
C Consumption and the allocation of time
D Households
5 Production
A Introduction
B The production function
B Variations in scale
C Variations in input proportions
D The multi-product case
6 Cost
A Introduction
B Long-run cost minimization
C Short-run cost minimization
D Cost minimization with several plants
E Multi-product cost functions
7 Supply and firm objectives
A Long-run profit maximization
B Short-run profit maximization
C The multi-product firm
D The profit function and comparative statics
E The entrepreneurial firm
F Labour managed firms
8 The theory of a competitive market
A Short-run equilibrium
B Stability of equilibrium
C Long-run equilibrium
9 Monopoly
A Introduction
B Price and output determination under monopoly
C Price discrimination
D Monopoly welfare loss
10 Input markets
A Demand for inputs
B Monopsony
C Unions as monopoly input suppliers
D Bilateral monopoly
11 Capital markets
A Introduction
B Optimal consumption over time
C The optimal investment decision
D Capital market equilibrium under certainty
E Extensions to many periods
12 General equilibrium
A Introduction
B Walrasian equilibrium of a competitive economy
C Existence of Walrasian equilibrium
D Stability of Walrasian equilibrium
E Edgeworth exchange theory
F Exchange, equilibrium and the core
13 Welfare economics
A Introduction
B Pareto efficient resource allocation
C Welfare functions and the Pareto criterion
D Pareto efficiency and competitive markets
E Distribution and markets
F Arrow's impossibility theorem
14 Market failure and government failure
A The causes of market failure
B Instances of market failure
C Theory of the second best
D Government failure
15 Game theory
A Introduction
B Game representation and solutions
C Imperfect and incomplete information
D Mixed strategies
E Cooperative bargaining
F Non-cooperative bargaining
G Delay and disagreement in bargaining
16 Oligopoly
17 Choice under uncertainty
A Introduction
B A formalization of 'uncertainty'
C Choice under uncertainty
D Properties of the utility function
E Risk aversion and indifference curves
F Measures of risk
G Comparative statics under uncertainty
18 Production under uncertainty
A Introduction
B Competitive firm under uncertainty
C Production with futures markets
19 Insurance, risk spreading and risk pooling
A Introduction
B The insurance decision
C Incomplete insurance markets
D Risk spreading: the Arrow-Lind Theorem
E Risk pooling
F Asymmetric information in insurance markets : adverse selection
G Asymmetric information in insurance markets : moral hazard
20 Agency and contract theory
21 General equilibrium under uncertainty and incomplete markets
A Introduction
B Complete markets in state contingent claims
C State contingent commodities
D Efficiency with production
E The stock market
F Incomplete stock markets
Further reading
Mathematical Appendices
A Structure of optimisation problems
B Solutions: questions and