ECF5040 - Industry economics
6 points, SCA Band 3, 0.125 EFTSL
Postgraduate Faculty of Business and Economics
Leader(s): Dr Mita Bhattacharya
Offered
Not offered in 2009
Synopsis
The unit develops and examines the theoretical and empirical relationships between the structure of industries, the behaviour of enterprises and market performance. The fundamental principles are applied to the advanced analysis of various forms of firms' interaction: entry deterrence, collusion, product differentiation, advertising, RandD, price discrimination, vertical integration. Welfare and policy issues will be discussed with the help of applied theory and empirical approach. In this respect recent journal articles will be used to analyse the concepts.
Objectives
The learning goals associated with this unit are to:
- to promote students understanding of the industry in which firms compete
- to understand strategic concepts and the use of such concepts with regard to economics, management, and organisational behaviour thereby developing an economic framework or way of thinking
- to understand the question 'how do we define the firm?', and the relationship of the definition of the firm to the 'make or buy' problem
- to establish an understanding of the dynamics of entry and exit in the marketplace by looking at strategies that incumbents employ to prevent entry or quicken exit by competitors
- to develop a competitive advantage framework for characterising and analysing a firm's strategic position within the market.
Assessment
Within semester assessment: 55%
Examination (2 hours): 45%
Contact hours
3 hours per week
Prerequisites
ECF4100 or ECC4650 or equivalent and ECF4200 or ECC4660 or equivalent