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Microeconomics

Code: LGE2112    Acronym: MICR

Subject: 2018/2019 - 2S

Teaching Area: Economics

Programmes

Acronym Study plan Curriculum Years ECTS Contact hours Total Hours
LGE Aviso n.º 9752/2017, de 23 de agosto 6 ECTS 61 160

Hours Effectively Taught

LGE1D

Theoretical-Practical: 43,50
Seminário: 0,00
Other: 0,00

LGE1N

Theoretical-Practical: 40,50
Seminário: 0,00
Other: 0,00

Teaching - Hours

Theoretical-Practical: 3,00
Seminário: 0,26
Other: 0,80

Teaching Language

Portuguese

Aims, Skills and Learning Outcomes

Descriptive Summary
Microeconomics is one of the major areas of knowledge economy, which is mainly the study of individual entities such as markets, businesses and families. This curricular unit is addressed primarily related content to the concepts of scarcity, production, goods and services, factors of production, supply and demand, balance and organization of markets, behavior of consumers and businesses and the state's role in the markets.

Objectives and learning outcomes
1. To sensitize the students to the difference between macro and microeconomics, focusing on the fundamental concepts and problems of the economy mainly related to scarcity, opportunity cost, economic efficiency and production-possibility frontier;
2. Explain the operation of competitive markets, understand how it handles the adjustment between demand and supply, as is the market equilibrium and determining their efficiency;
3. Understand the main determinants that guide decisions and consumer choices, especially their preferences and budget restrictions to which they are subject;
4. Understand the behavior of companies and the objectives that guide its activities, including the transformation of productive factors in goods / tradable services and maximize results;
5. Understand the relationship between the state and the market, especially in pricing, public goods supply and control of externalities.

Skills to develop
With the matter taught students should be able to:
1. Understand the everyday decisions of economic actors, their motivations and how they influence the market balance;
2. Understand how to organize and run the markets and how consumers and companies constantly change their positions towards different stimuli;
3. Determine the factors that influence the determination of prices, especially at the cost structure of companies and government intervention on the markets;
4. Indicate the strategic behavior of the companies adjusted to the conditions of the markets in order to effectively achieve their objectives;
5. Build and interpret graphical representations, research work and analyze statistical data and percecionar the factors that influence the evolutionary process of markets.

Programme

1 INTRODUCTION TO MICROECONOMICS 
1.1 Basic concepts.
1.2 The fundamental economic problems.

2 OPERATION OF COMPETITIVE MARKETS 
2.1 Demand and Supply.
2.2 Market balance.
2.3 Supply and demand elasticity.
2.4 Economic efficiency: the consumer and producer surplus.

3 CONSUMER BEHAVIOUR THEORY 
3.1 Budgetary constraint.
3.2 Utility and preferences of the consumer.
3.3 Consumers choice.
3.4 The Income effect and Substitution Effect.

4 COMPANY THEORY 
4.1 Technology and Production Function. 
4.2 Revenues and Production costs. 
4.3 The Market structures. 
4.4 Strategic behaviour.

5 THE STATE AND THE WELL-BEING ECONOMY 
5.1 Price control. 
5.2 Fiscal Policy.
5.3 Limitations to the market power. 
5.4 Externalities and public goods.

Demonstration of the syllabus coherence with the curricular unit's learning objectives

The proposed program allows students to obtain crucial knowledge and develop competencies foreseen in the objectives and as follows:
- Chapter 1 responds to objective 1, including the fundamental concepts of microeconomics;
- Chapter 2 meets the objective 2, explaining the market equilibrium mechanisms;
- Chapter 3 attains objective 3, providing essential knowledge regarding the consumer behaviour;
- Chapter 4 exhibits the contents to respond to objective 4, which consist in the recognition of the producers' decisions.
- Chapter 5 includes the contests needed to access the objetive 5, describing the Government intervention on market equilibrium.

Main literature

PINDYCK, R. & RUBINFELD. D.;Microeconomics (9th Edition), Pearson, 2017. ISBN: 978-0134184241
SAMUELSON, P. & NORDHAUS, W. ; Economia (19ª Edição), Mcgraw-Hil, Lisboa, 2012

Supplementary Bibliography

MANKIW, N.;Principles of Economics (8th Edition), Cengage Learning, 2018. ISBN: 978-1305585126
LIPSEY, R. & CHRYSTAL, K.;Economics (13th edition), Oxford. ISBN: 9780199676835
MIRA, N.;Microeconomia, Edições Sílabo, Lisboa, 2011
NABAIS, C. & FERREIRA, R. ;Microeconomia Lições e Exercícios, Lidel, 2010. ISBN: 9789727575848

Learning Methods

The syllabus of this curricular unit will be mainly explained in theoretical-practical classes, which combine the theoretical exposition and the discussion of practical cases, and the resolution of application exercises. For that purpose, we use as support tools, means either in paper format or with an informatics base, like the Microsoft PowerPoint software. 
Regarding classes orientation, will be encouraged and valued a pro-active attitude and encouraged a critical stance on the contents exposed and current microeconomic issues. 


Assessment Components

Avaliação distribuída com exame final

Assessment Components

Description Type Time (hours) Conclusion Date
Attendance (estimated)  Lessons  45
 Trabalho laboratorial ou de campo  1
 Teste/Exame  3
 Study  111
  Total: 160

Continuous Assessment

Individual written work done in elearning with a weighting of 20% in the final grade.

Two individual written tests, with an overall weight of 80% in the final grade (40% / each).


Under the terms of the Bachelor's Regulation:

1. The students' attendance in classes will be recorded and, if the number of absences per student exceeds 30% of the total number of lessons scheduled for each course unit, the student will be automatically transferred to the final evaluation (regular season).

2. In the written tests and other assessment elements mentioned in paragraph 2 of Art. 39 it is necessary to obtain a minimum grade of 7.5 (seven point five) points.

3. If the student misses a test or receives a grade lower than 7.5 points in the tests or in another assessment element mentioned in the previous number, the student will be automatically transferred to the final evaluation (regular season).

4. If the student misses or obtains less than 7.5 in the second written test, held in the same date of the final exam in the regular season, they may apply for further evaluation in the Appeal season.

Final Exam

Individual written test: 100%.

Demonstration of the coherence between the teaching methodologies and the learning outcomes

Based on different approaches  theoretical presentation, the discussion of practical cases, and the resolution of application exercises synergies can be obtained and the economic reasoning can be stimulated. 
We these distinct methodologies used the student will have access to both theoretical contents and practical tools to understand the real application of the microeconomic theory in the real economy context.