Lecturer: Dr P Waldron
Date: 1995-96
Groups: J.S./S.S. Mathematics, J.S./S.S. TSM
Prerequisites: 211 is an essential prerequisite, 221 and 251 are strongly recommended and 212 would be useful, but not essential. Students would also benefit by simultaneously taking Course 412 - Probability.
Duration: Michaelmas, Hilary and Trinity
Lectures per week:
Assessment: Problem sets will be assigned regularly throughout the course and will be discussed in tutorials
Examinations:
Course 381, first offered in 1993-94, is a course in mathematical economics (including a substantial component on mathematical finance) taught by Dr Patrick Waldron (Economics Department). It is a compulsory mathematics course for Junior Sophister TSM students in mathematics and economics and may also be chosen by the following:
There will be two lectures per week and tutorials will be arranged
from week 3 of Michaelmas term. Some tutorials will be based on a
collection of Mathematica notebooks accompanying the textbook by
Varian.
Objective
The objective of this course is to introduce students of mathematics
to a few of the countless applications of mathematics in modern
economics and finance. Much of the mathematics will be familiar, and
the emphasis will be on applying it in economics.
Course outline
The course will be broken down into the following topics:
Textbooks
[1] Arrow, K.J. and Hahn, F.H. (1971), General Competitive Analysis,
Holden-Day, San Francisco.
[2] Debreu, G. (1959), Theory of Value: An Axiomatic Analysis of Economic
Equilibrium, Yale University Press, New Haven.
[3] Dixit, A.K. (1990), Optimization in Economic Theory, 2nd edition,
Oxford University Press, Oxford.
[4] Hildenbrand, W. and Kirman, A.P. (1988), Equilibrium Analysis:
Variations on themes by Edgeworth and Walras, North-Holland,
Amsterdam.
[5] Huang, C.-F. and Litzenberger, R.H. (1988), Foundations for Financial
Economics, North-Holland.
[6] Kreps, D.M. (1990), A Course in Microeconomic Theory, Harvester
Wheatsheaf, New York.
[7] Madden, P. (1986), Concavity and Optimization in Microeconomics, Basil
Blackwell, Oxford.
[8] Mendelson, B. (1975), Introduction to Topology, 3rd edition, Allyn and
Bacon, Boston.
[8] Merton, R.C. (1972), ``An analytic derivation of the efficient portfolio
frontier", Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis 7,
1851-1872.
[9] Roberts, A.W. and Varberg, D.E. (1973), Convex Functions, Academic
Press, New York.
[10] Rockafellar, R.T. (1970), Convex Analysis, Princeton University Press,
Princeton.
[11] Roll, R. (1977), ``A critique of the asset pricing theory's tests -
Part I: On past and potential testability of the theory", Journal of
Financial Economics 4, 129-176.
[12] Silberberg, E. (1978), The Structure of Economics: A Mathematical
Analysis, McGraw-Hill, New York.
[13] Simon, C.P. and Blume, L. (1994), Mathematics for Economists, Norton,
New York.
[14] Takayama, A. (1994), Analytical Methods in Economics, Harvester
Wheatsheaf, New York.
[15] Varian, H.R. (1992), Microeconomic Analysis, 3rd edition, Norton, New
York.
For the first eight topics, the primary text, insofar as there is one, is Varian. For the last seven topics, it is Huang and Litzenberger. Students should also get the errata for Varian's book. Reference will occasionally be made to particular topics convered in the other sources listed here.