Industrial Organization [ LECON2610 ]
5.0 crédits ECTS
30.0 h
Teacher(s) |
Parenti Mathieu ;
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Language |
English
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Place of the course |
Louvain-la-Neuve
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Prerequisites |
An advanced course in Microeconomics.
An introductory course in Industrial Organization
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Main themes |
Market power
Sources of market power
Pricing strategies and market segmentation
Product quality and information
Theory of competition policy
R&D and intellectual property
Network, standards and systems
Market intermediation
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Aims |
In terms of knowledge, students should be able at the end of the course to
(i) understand how and why oligopolistic firms manage to set equilibrium prices above marginal costs,
(ii) analyze asymmetric information problems, in which firms choose their marketing strategy to inform consumers about product quality,
(iii) address competition policy issues (cartels, collusion, mergers, exclusionary conduct),
(iv) understand strategies and policies related to innovation and intellectual property,
(v) analyze topical issues pertaining to network and platform markets.
In terms of skills, students should be able at the end of the course to
(vi) read and discuss recent contributions to the theoretical and empirical literature in industrial organization.
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Evaluation methods |
The final grade in this course will be based on grades for problem sets and article presentation (40%) and a final exam (60%).
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Teaching methods |
Teaching is by combination of lectures and individual and/or group assignments (problem solving and article presentations). Lectures are given by the professor and are two hours long. There will be 13 lectures. Reading assignments are set during lectures to help students read around the subjects in their own time. Problem sets are also assigned to help students applying the concepts and understanding the methods. Finally, students will be asked (individually or in group, according to the size of the class) to present and discuss a recent paper.
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Content |
Industrial organization is the study of firms and markets. It focuses on firm behavior in imperfectly competitive markets, which are characterized by strategic interaction among firms. The course aims at understanding how firms acquire and use market power, how they make their strategic decisions about a large array of variables (prices, capacities, product positioning, R&D, mergers and acquisitions, '), how the combination of these decisions affect consumers and the performance of the markets. The course also aims at shedding light on government policies, in particular with respect to competition (but also to innovation, to compatibility, to product quality, '). From a methodological point of view, the course aims at analyzing the modeling techniques that are used to address these issues.
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Bibliography |
The main textbook for the course is Belleflamme, P. and Peitz, M. (2010), Industrial Organization: Markets and Strategies. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Another useful textbook is Tirole, J. (1988), The Theory of Industrial Organization. Cambridge (MA): MIT Press
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Cycle et année d'étude |
> Master [120] in Economics: Econometrics
> Master [120] in Economics: General
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Faculty or entity in charge |
> ECON
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