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A Course in Microeconomic Theory by David M. Kreps
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A Course in Microeconomic Theory

by David M. Kreps

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In grad school the professor who required this text remarked that some students whined about the details Kreps includes. But you have to include the details, or you're not giving people the straight dope. Kreps actually includes most of the qualifications, exceptions, and cautions in clearly marked passages so you can skip all that and read for the general idea if you like. That seems like a good way to straddle the issue of coverage.
Bonus: An appendix that presents a "recipe" for solving Kuhn-Tucker problems. ( )
  Adaptive_Agent | Apr 12, 2008 |
Not the most comprehensive book to use as a reference, but outstanding as a text! ( )
  szarka | Feb 18, 2007 |
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Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0691042640, Hardcover)

David M. Kreps has developed a text in microeconomics that is both challenging and "user-friendly." The work is designed for the first-year graduate microeconomic theory course and is accessible to advanced undergraduates as well. Placing unusual emphasis on modern noncooperative game theory, it provides the student and instructor with a unified treatment of modern microeconomic theory--one that stresses the behavior of the individual actor (consumer or firm) in various institutional settings. The author has taken special pains to explore the fundamental assumptions of the theories and techniques studied, pointing out both strengths and weaknesses.

The book begins with an exposition of the standard models of choice and the market, with extra attention paid to choice under uncertainty and dynamic choice. General and partial equilibrium approaches are blended, so that the student sees these approaches as points along a continuum. The work then turns to more modern developments. Readers are introduced to noncooperative game theory and shown how to model games and determine solution concepts. Models with incomplete information, the folk theorem and reputation, and bilateral bargaining are covered in depth. Information economics is explored next. A closing discussion concerns firms as organizations and gives readers a taste of transaction-cost economics.

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:16 -0400)

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