teaching
Department of Economics, University of Cambridge
This course covers the standard economic models of individual decision-making with and without uncertainty, models of consumer behaviour and producer behaviour under perfect competition and the Arrow-Debreu general equilibrium model.
The course is divided into three parts: choice theory, choice under uncertainty, and general equilibrium.Microeconomics | graduate (research) | 2018
This course covers the basic tools of (mainly non-cooperative) game theory. The course is concerned with both static and dynamic games of perfect/complete and imperfect/incomplete information. The course also covers bargaining, as well as mechanism design.Game Theory | graduate (research) | 2020
This course develops some of the central topics in the theory of industrial organisation. Although the main angle of analysis will be analytical, applications of the theory to practical competition policy issues will be emphasised. In particular, issues of market power, anticompetitive practices and possible policy responses will be discussed.Industrial Organisation | graduate | 2019-2021
This course covers the essential mathematical concepts and techniques required for economics. It is divided into a mathematics and a statistics part. The mathematics part covers calculus and optimisation, linear algebra, and difference and differential equations. The statistics part covers descriptive statistics, probability and distribution theory, and estimation and inference.Quantitative Methods | undergraduate | 2018-2021
This course covers essential mathematics for econometrics and problems of optimal choice. The mathematics part covers static and dynamic optimization techniques. The first part of the course contains a full presentation of the Lagrange (Kuhn-Tucker) method. The second part is an introduction into dynamic optimization, in particular optimal control. The probability and statistics part covers essential mathematics for econometrics: Probability theory, linear algebra, and statistics.Mathematics and Statistics | undergraduate | 2018-2021
Judge Business School, University of Cambridge
The course shows how business economics may be used to explain and predict phenomena relating to markets and firms, and explores some of the possible uses of business economics in the analysis of management problems and in managerial decision-making. The course covers basic microeconomics and introduces macroeconomics.Economics of Firms and Markets | undergraduate | 2017
Department of Engineering, University of Cambridge
The aims of the course are to introduce students to the use of economics to understand the operation and decisions of businesses, their industrial environment and the macroeconomy. Specific topics that are covered include consumer theory, theory of the firm and different market structures, game theory, and welfare economics.Business Economics | undergraduate | 2017