School of Business and Economics
Thinking Strategically
Full course description
In many situations, economic actors need to make decision while knowing that the final outcome will also depend on the decisions of others. Think, for instance, of competing firms who must choose a price for their product, knowing that their market share will also depend on the prices of the competitors. Such situations are called games, and the actors involved are called players. In order to reach a good decision, it is important for a player to reason about the decisions and motivations of his opponents. In this course you learn how to reason about your opponents in game theoretic situations, and how to use this reasoning to make good decisions. The theory will be applied to various economic situations of interest.Course objectives
After this course students know the basic concepts of game theory and their applications to economics.Prerequisites
Basic knowledge of standard calculus, as taught in the first year of an average program in economics or business. For students from Maastricht: level of QM1 and QM2.Recommended reading
Andrés Perea: "Epistemic Game Theory: Reasoning and Choice", Cambridge University Press, 2012.EBC2082
Period 1
2 Sep 2024
25 Oct 2024
ECTS credits:
6.5Instruction language:
EnglishCoordinator:
Teaching methods:
Assignment(s), Lecture(s), PBLAssessment methods:
Attendance, Participation, Written exam