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Game Theory
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What a "Game" means in Game Theory. Rivalry is direct. In "Zero-Sum" games you win just what the other guy loses. Economic market games are often non-zero sum. Noncooperative often. Oligopolistic.
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Who needs to study Game Theory? We will do two-person games in this course.
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Nash Equilibrium: A set of strategies such that each player believes accurately that he is doing the best he can given the strategy of the other player.
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Nash as a young man Nash as a Nobel Prize Winner The book and the Oscar-winning movie.
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Cournot Oligopoly: This historical first oligopoly model has the nature of a modern game theoretic game.
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Cournot Duopoly example: Carpenter & Hannover
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Hypothetical: Hannover increases to 100 units.
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Hypothetical: Hannover produces 200 units.
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Reaction Curves for Hannover & Carpenter
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Applications of Game Theory outside of economics: Prisoner's Dilemma MAD our historical Cold War policy on nuclear attack missiles and our defensive system.
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Does Cheating Pay?
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Most-favored Customer Policies.
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Before Most-favored Customer Clause
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After Most-Favored Customer Clause
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Lecture and discussion topics: Oligopolistic Rivalry The Importance of Commitment Preempting Potential Rivals When Is A Threat Credible?
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The Importance of Entry Deterring Entry. (DuPont Case discussion) Advertising to Resist Entry (Folgers Case discussion) Preemptive Strategies: (Wal-Mart Case next slide)
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Walmart Case: Preemptive strategies.
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