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Intermediate Microeconomics Summary - Week 1 to 4

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A summary of the lecture and book material covered in weeks 1 to 4 of the Intermediate Microeconomics course.

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Summarized whole book?
No
Which chapters are summarized?
The chapters needed for this course.
Uploaded on
October 17, 2016
Number of pages
18
Written in
2016/2017
Type
Summary

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Intermediate Microeconomics, Games and Behaviour Week 1

Allocating scarce resources: economic agents trade of marginal benefits against costs
 Individual -> decision -> outcome

The single person decision problem: uncertainty and time

1. Risk and uncertainty
 Uncertainty: likelihood of outcomes unknown
 Risk: likelihood of outcomes known
-> we use risk and uncertainty interchangeably

Calculating the expected value

Expected value: Probability - weighted average of the payoffs associated with all possible
outcomes.
Payoff: value associated with a possible outcome.
Variability: the extent to which the possible outcomes of an uncertain situation differ.

The expected value of Y -> E(Y)
E(Y)= Pr1.y1 + Pr2.y2
Y1, y2 = payoffs (in this example: income) Pr1, Pr2 = probabilities of y1 and y2, respectively

 Utility of the expected value does not consider the risk involved -> U[E(Y)]
 Expected utility does consider the risk involved -> E(U)

Expected utility: Sum of the utilities associated with all possible outcomes, weighted by the
probability that each outcome will occur.
Utility of expected income: Sum of possible outcomes, weighted by their probability of
occurring, and finding the utility of that number.

Main assumption of expected utility theory: individual preferences over risky outcomes satisfy
specific axioms (completeness, transitivity, continuity and independence).
A decision maker facing a decision problem with a risky payoff is rational if he chooses an action
that maximizes his expected utility.

 Risk neutral: condition of being indifferent between a certain income and an uncertain
income with the same expected value.
 Risk averse: condition of preferring a certain income to a risky income with the same
expected value.
 Risk loving: condition of preferring a risky income to a certain income with the same
expected value.

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