An introductory course in Industrial Organization
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
At the end of this learning unit, the student is able to : | |
1 | In terms of knowledge, students should be able at the end of the course to |
The contribution of this Teaching Unit to the development and command of the skills and learning outcomes of the programme(s) can be accessed at the end of this sheet, in the section entitled “Programmes/courses offering this Teaching Unit”.
' In-class participation (10%),
' A presentation on a recent paper (40%), and
' A take-home final exam (50%), which must be completed within 1 day.
In the last class, each student should give a presentation on one of the recommended papers, with 15 minutes for a short summary, 10 minutes for their own comments, and 5 minutes for questions from other students and me.
Outline of Topics:
Lectures 1&2 (March 24): Product Differentiation
Lectures 3&4 (March 31): Price Discrimination
Lectures 5&6 (April 7): Switching Costs
Lectures 7&8 (April 14): Network Effects
Lectures 9&10 (April 21): Standardization
Lectures 11&12 (April 28): Two-sided Markets, Competition Policy
Lectures 13&14 (May 12): The Economics of IT, Student Presentations
articles. Detailed lecture notes and related readings will be provided throughout the course. As a general reference, the following books are recommended:
' Tirole, Jean, 1988. The Theory of Industrial Organization, MIT Press.
' Belleflamme, Paul and Martin Peitz, 2015. Industrial Organization: Markets and Strategies, Cambridge University Press.