Organizational economics

Master

In Maynard (USA)

Price on request

Description

  • Type

    Master

  • Location

    Maynard (USA)

  • Start date

    Different dates available

This course in organizational economics prepares doctoral students for further study in the field. The course introduces the classic papers and some recent research. The material is organized into the following modules: boundaries of the firm, employment in organizations, decision-making in organizations, and structures and processes in organizations. Each class session covers a few leading papers.

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Location

Start date

Maynard (USA)
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02139

Start date

Different dates availableEnrolment now open

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Subjects

  • Economics

Course programme

Lectures: 2 sessions / week, 1.5 hours / session


This course in organizational economics prepares doctoral students for further study in the field. The course introduces the classic papers and some recent research. The material is organized into the following modules:


Each class session covers a few leading papers.


This course was joint-taught between faculty of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Harvard University. The Harvard course is Economics 2670 Organizational Economics.


The prerequisites are first-year graduate microeconomics (Economics 2010a Economic Theory and 2010b Economic Theory at Harvard or the 14.121-14.124 Microeconomic Theory I-IV sequence at MIT). In addition students should be familiar and comfortable with the material on incentives and control discussed in the following readings:


Gibbons, Robert. "Incentives Between Firms (and Within)." Management Science 51 (2005): 2-17 (sections 2-4).


———. "Four Formal(izable) Theories of the Firm?" Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization 58 (2005): 202-247 (section 2).


There are three deliverables for credit in the course. The first is a set of three short model-development essays , corresponding to the class sessions devoted to discussing case studies (Ses #7, #9, and #20). There are also cases (marked by "C") in some other class sessions; one such case can be the basis for one model-development essay.


In addition to the model-development essays, there are two other requirements: a review essay on one of the draft chapters of The Handbook of Organizational Economics (marked by "H") and a final paper on any topic of interest to you relating to the material in the course.


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Organizational economics

Price on request