#1
April 8th, 2017, 05:31 PM
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Gokhale Institute of Politics and Economics (GIPE)
My sister has completed Graduation with Economics discipline recently. Now she wants to take admission in M.Sc. (Economics) Program at Gokhale Institute of Politics and Economics (GIPE). So she wants to see syllabus before applying for admission. So can you provide syllabus of M.Sc. (Economics) Program at Gokhale Institute of Politics and Economics (GIPE).
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#2
April 9th, 2017, 09:59 AM
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Re: Gokhale Institute of Politics and Economics (GIPE)
As you are searching for syllabus of M.Sc. (Economics) Program at Gokhale Institute of Politics and Economics (GIPE), so here is following syllabus: Gokhale Institute of Politics and Economics (GIPE) M.Sc. (Economics) Program Syllabus COMPULSORY PAPERS A-01 Microeconomics - I 2-3 A-02 Microeconomics - II 4-5 A-03 Macroeconomics 6 A-04 Monetary Macroeconomics 7 A-05 Econometrics - I 8-9 A-06 Econometrics - II 10 A-07 Economics of Development 11-13 A-08 Public Economics 14-15 A-09 Indian Public Economics 16-17 A-10 International Economics: Pure Theory 18-20 A-11 International Economics: Money and Finance 21-22 A-12 National Income Analysis 23-24 A-13 Mathematics for Economic Analysis 25 A-14 Population Studies and Health Economics 26-28 A-15 Accountancy and Financial Statement Analysis 29 A-16 Financial Economics 30-33 OPTIONAL PAPERS (Any four to be opted) B-01 Indian Agricultural Economics 34-36 B-02 Transport Economics 37-38 B-03 Industry: Organization, Structure and Problems 39-41 B-04 Linear Economics 42-45 B-05 Economics of Labour 46-50 B-06 Financial Institutions and Markets 51-53 B-07 Law and Economics - I 54-56 B-08 Law and Economics - II 57-58 B-09 Economic Sociology 59-61 B-10 Environmental Economics 62-64 B-11 Social Exclusion and Inclusive Policy 65-66 B-12 Political Economy of India’s Development 67-68 A-01: MICROECONOMICS - I Module 1: Consumer Theory Preference relation and its properties. Consumer preferences and representation of preferences by utility functions. Budget constraint, Utility maximization and derivation of demand function, Indirect utility function and its properties, Roy’s identity, Expenditure function, Shephards lemma, Inverse demand functions, The money metric utility functions. Comparative statics, The Slutsky equation, Properties of demand function Comparative statics using first order conditions, The integrability problem. Revealed preferences. Endowments in the budget constraint, Labour leisure trade off. Consumer’s surplus, Compensating and Equivalent Variations Module 2: Theory of Firm Theory of organisation. Measurements of inputs and outputs, Specification of technology – production Function, Returns to scale and other properties of production sets, Technical rate of substitution and elasticity of substitution. Profit maximization, Comparative statics, Profit function. Hotelling’s lemma, Factor demand functions, Supply function. Cost minimisation, Cost functions, Average and marginal cost functions, Short run and long run costs, Marginal cost pricing, aggregation – industry supply function, Shephard’s lemma, Conditional factor demand functions. Duality between production and cost functions. Module 3: Theory of Market I: Perfect Competition, Monopoly, and Monopolistic Competition Perfect competition: short run and long run market equilibrium. Efficiency and welfare. – Critiques of P. Sraffa, and J. Robinson. Monopoly: Monopoly power, Equilibrium output and prices, Effect on welfare, Price discrimination – first, second, and third degree, Quality choice under monopoly. Monopolistic Competition Module 4: Game theory (basic introduction) Description of a game, Normal form representation of game, Extensive form representation of game, Solution concepts—Nash Equilibrium, Mixed strategies, Repeated games, Sequential games, Refinement: Sub-game perfection. Module 5: Theory of Market II: Oligopoly Cournot equilibrium, stability, comparative statics, welfare. Bertrand equilibrium.Quantity leadership, Price leadership. Conjectural variations. Spatial competition: Linear city model, Circular city model. Gokhale Institute of Politics and Economics (GIPE) M.Sc. (Economics) Program Syllabus |
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