
Lecture Description
This video lecture, part of the series Environmental Economics and Policy by Prof. David Zetland, does not currently have a detailed description and video lecture title. If you have watched this lecture and know what it is about, particularly what Economics topics are discussed, please help us by commenting on this video with your suggested description and title. Many thanks from,
- The CosmoLearning Team
- The CosmoLearning Team
Course Index
- Introduction to Environmental Economics
- Water markets, Options and Trading (Guest lecture by Claire Tompkins)
- Transport (Guest lecture by Damian Bickett)
- Review of Guest Lectures
- Supply and Demand
- Missing Markets, Elasticity, and Constrained Optimization
- Marginal Rate of Substitution vs. Elasticity
- The Production Function & Profit Maximization
- Political Economy, Macroeconomics, and Optimal Production
- Transport, Markets vs. Bureaucracy, Walkout
- Cost Accounting, Benefit, and Opportunity Costs
- Lecture 12
- Lerner Index, Monopsony, Bilateral Monopoly, and Two-sided Markets
- Corporate Social Responsibility vs. Profit Max
- The Sociology of Economists
- Principal-Agent Economics
- Homo Economicus vs. Social Preferences
- Scientific Method (Popper's Falsification, Deductive and Inductive Reasoning)
- Lobbying, Auctions, and Microfinance
- Intrinsic/Extrinsic Incentives, Public Choice
- Game Theory: Prisoner's Dilemma, Sequential Games, Mixed Strategies
- Dutch Infrastructure and the Struggle of Competing Interests (Guest lecture by Ties Rijcken)
- Cournot Competition & Bertrand Competition
- Extrinsic vs. Intrinsic Motivation
- Climate Change: Politics, Collective Action, and Climategate
- Bounded Rationality, Bubbles, and Risk Aversion
- Free-riders vs. Cooperators
- Strategy in Public Goods Game
Course Description
Microeconomic Theory with Application to Natural Resources by instructor David Zetland, PhD. This course covers the basic microeconomic tools for further study of natural resource problems. Theory of consumption, production, theory of the firm, industrial organization, general equilibrium, public goods and externalities. Applications to agriculture and natural resources.
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