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Old September 26th, 2012, 12:23 PM
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I want M.Com Commerce Economic topic Syllabus for North Bengal University In Siliguri. Please provide me its Syllabus?

As you are looking for the syllabus MA Economics of North Bengal University in Siliguri so here it is given below

1st Semester
(All papers are compulsory)

401. Microeconomic Analysis-IA (35 marks)
402. Microeconomics-IIA (35 marks)
403. Macroeconomics-IA (35 marks)
404. Money Banking and Financial Markets-IIA (35 marks)
405. Quantitative Methods-IA (35 marks)
406. Quantitative Methods-IIA (35 marks)
407. History of Economic Thought-IA (35 marks)
408. Public Economics-IIA (35 marks)

2nd Semester
(All papers are compulsory)

401. Microeconomic Analysis-IB (40 marks)
402. Microeconomics –IIB (40 marks)
403. Macroeconomics –IB (40 marks)
404. Money Banking and Financial Markets –IIB (40 marks)
405. Quantitative Methods –IB (40 marks)
406. Quantitative Methods –IIB (40 marks)
407. History of Economic Thought –IB (40 marks)
408. Public Economics –IIB (40 marks)

3rd Semester
(Compulsory Papers)

501. Growth Economics-IA (35 marks)
502. Development Economics-IIA (35 marks)
503. International Trade & International Finance-IA (35 marks)
504. Economics of Social Sector and Physical Infrastructure-IIA (35 marks)


North Bengal University in Siliguri MA Economics syllabus
Special Papers
(Each student shall opt for two special papers out of the following eight special papers)

521. Agricultural Economics - IA (35 marks)
522. Agricultural Economics -IIA (35 marks)
523. Advanced International Economics-IA (35 marks)
524. Advanced International Economics-IIA. (35 marks)
525. Natural Resource and Environmental Economics-IA (35 marks)
526. Natural Resource and Environmental Economics.-IIA (35 marks)
527. Econometrics with Computer Applications – IA (35 marks)
528. Econometrics with Computer Applications – IIA (35 marks)
529. Demography and Human Population Studies – IA (35 marks)
530. Demography and Human Population Studies – IIA (35 marks)
531. Economics of Gender and Development – IA (35 marks)
532. Economics of Gender and Development – IIA (35 marks)
533. Industrial Economics.-IA(35 marks)
534. Industrial Economics.-IIA(35 marks)
535. Investment Analysis and Portfolio Management.-IA (35 marks)
536. Investment Analysis and Portfolio Management.- II A (35 marks)

4th Semester
(Compulsory Papers)

501. Growth Economics-IB (40 marks)
502. Development Economics-IIB (40 marks)
503. International Trade & International Finance –IB (40 marks)
504. Economics of Social Sector and Physical Infrastructure-IIB (40 marks)

Special Papers
(To be continued as in semester III)

521. Agricultural Economics. - IB (40 marks)
522. Agricultural Economics.-IIB (40 marks)
523. Advanced International Economics-IB (40 marks)
524. Advanced International Economics-IIB. (40 marks)
525. Natural Resource and Environmental Economics-IB (40 marks)
526. Natural Resource and Environmental Economics.-IIB (40 marks)
527. Econometrics with Computer Applications – IB (40 marks)
528. Econometrics with Computer Applications – IIB (40 marks)
529. Demography and Human Population Studies – IB (40 marks)
530. Demography and Human Population Studies – IIB (40 marks)
531. Economics of Gender and Development – IB (40 marks)
532. Economics of Gender and Development – IIB (40 marks)
533. Industrial Economics.-IB(40 marks)
534. Industrial Economics.-IIB(40 marks)
535. Investment Analysis and Portfolio Management.-IB (40 marks)
536. Investment Analysis and Portfolio Management.- IIB (40 marks)

Internal Assessment
First Semester
1) Survey-based Group Discussion : 40 Marks.
2) Class Test : 80 Marks
Total : 120 Marks
Second Semester
3) Viva Voce : 40 Marks.
4) Class Test : 40 Marks
Total : 80 Marks
Third Semester
5) Survey-based Group Discussion : 40 Marks.
/Dissertation
6) Class Test : 80 Marks
Total : 120 Marks
Fourth Semester
7) Viva voce/Viva based on : 40 Marks.
/Dissertation
8) Class Test : 40 Marks
Total : 80 Marks

Semester I
Course 401: Microeconomic Analysis - IA
Module 1. Consumer Choice and Advanced Utility Theory
Utility Preference & Choice, Classical and Neoclassical Theories of demand. Further Developments in Demand Theory. Properties of Preference Orderings – Existence of Utility functions. Relationships between Demand, Indirect Utility and Expenditure functions. Consumer’s Surplus and Compensating Variations – The Compensated Demand Curve. The Structure of Utility Functions: Additive Utility functions; Separable Utility Functions.
Readings:
• Jeffrey, M. Perloff (1999): Microeconomics, Addison-Wesley.
• Gravelle, H. & R. Rees (1981): Microeconomics, Longman, London.
• Mansfield, E. (1997): Microeconomics (9th Edition), W.W. Norton and Company, New York.
• Mas-Collel, Andreu, Michael D. Whinston and Jenry R Green (2007): Microeconomic Theory, OUP, New Delhi.
• Sen, Anindya (1999): Microeconomics: Theory and Applications, OUP, Delhi.
• Varian, Hal R. (2000): Microeconomic Analysis, New York, W.W. Norton.
Module 2. Uncertainty, Missing Markets and Limited Information
Decision making under Uncertainty, Avoiding Risks, Investing under Uncertainty, Externalities, Commons, and Public Goods; Asymmetric Information, Contracts and Moral Hazards.
Readings:
• Akerlof, George A. (1970): “The Market for Lemons: Quality Uncertainty and the Market Mechanism”, Quarterly Journal of Economics 84 (3), August 1970: 488-500.
• Chipman, J. and J. Moore (1980): “Compensating Variation, Consumer Surplus and Welfare”, American Economic Review 70: 933-48.
• Dixit, Avinash K. and Robert S. Pindyck (1994): Investment under Uncertainty, Princeton, N.J., Princeton University Press.
• Gravelle, H. & R. Rees (1981): Microeconomics, Longman, London.
• Green, H. and V. Walsh (1975): Classical and Neo-classical Theories of General Equilibrium, OUP, London.
• Hicks, J. (1939): Value and Capital, Clarendon Press, Oxford.
• Jeffrey, M. Perloff (1999): Microeconomics, Addison-Wesley.
• Mansfield, E. (1997); Microeconomics (9th Edition), W.W. Norton and Company, New York.
• Marshall, A. (1920): Principles of Economics, Macmillan, London.
• Mas-Collel, Andreu, Michael D. Whinston and Jenry R Green (2007): Microeconomic Theory, OUP, New Delhi.
• Neumann, John von and Oscar Morgenstern (1944): Theory of Games and Economic Behaviour, Princeton, N.J., Princeton University Press.
• Pindyck, Robert S. and Daniel L. Rubinfeld (2003): Microeconomics (5th Edition), Pearson Education, New Delhi.
• Salvatore, Dominick (2002): Microeconomic Theory and Applications, Oxford University Press.
• Sen, Anindya (1999): Microeconomics: Theory and Applications, OUP, Delhi.
• Spence (1974): Market Signaling, Cambridge, Harvard University Press.
• Varian, Hal R. (2000): Microeconomic Analysis, New York, W.W. Norton.
Semester II
Course 401: Microeconomic Analysis - IB
Module 1. Economics of Market Structure
Review of Basic alternative Market Structures, Cooperative Oligopoly Models, Cournot Model of Non-cooperative Behaviour, Stackelberg Model of Non-cooperative Behavior, Pricing – Bertrand Equilibrium with Identical and Differentiated Products, Price Discrimination – Perfect Price Discrimination, Quantity Price Discrimination, Multimarket Price Discrimination, Strategy – Preventing Entry, Creating and Using Cost Advantages, Advertising.
Readings:
• Jeffrey, M. Perloff (1999): Microeconomics, Addison-Wesley.
• Gravelle, H. & R. Rees (1981): Microeconomics, Longman, London.
• Mansfield, E. (1997): Microeconomics (9th Edition), W.W. Norton and Company, New York.
• Mas-Collel, Andreu, Michael D. Whinston and Jenry R Green (2007): Microeconomic Theory, OUP, New Delhi.
• Sen, Anindya (1999): Microeconomics: Theory and Applications, OUP, Delhi.
• Varian, Hal R. (2000): Microeconomic Analysis, New York, W.W. Norton.
Module 2. Theory of Games and Economic Behaviors
Cooperative vs Non-cooperative Games, Extensive Form Representation of a Game, Strategies and the Normal Form Representation of a Game. Simultaneous Move Games – Dominant and Dominated Strategies, Nash Equilibrium, Games of Incomplete Information: Bayesian Nash Equilibrium. Dynamic Games – Sequential Rationality, Backward Induction and Sub-game Perfection, Beliefs and Sequential Rationality, Reasonable Beliefs and Forward Induction.
Readings:
• Aumann (1974): “Subjectivity and Correlation in Randomized Strategies”, Journal of Mathematical Economics (1): 67-96.
• Gravelle, H. & R. Rees (1981): Microeconomics, Longman, London.
• Jeffrey, M. Perloff (1999): Microeconomics, Addison-Wesley.
• Kreps, D. (1984): Signaling Games and Stable Equilibrium, Mimeo.
• Mas-Collel, Andreu, Michael D. Whinston and Jenry R Green (2007): Microeconomic Theory, OUP, New Delhi.
• Nash, J.F. (1951): “Non-Cooperative Games”, Annals of Mathematics 54: 289-95.
• Osborne, Martin J. (2004): An Introduction to Game Theory, OUP, New York.
• Rosenthal, R. (1981): “Games of Perfect Information, Predatory Pricing and the Chain-Store Paradox”, Journal of Economic Theory 25: 92-100.
• Salvatore, Dominick (2002): Microeconomic Theory and Applications, Oxford University Press.
• Schelling, T. (1960): The Strategy of Conflict, Cambridge Mass: Harvard University Press.
• Sen, Anindya (1999): Microeconomics: Theory and Applications, OUP, Delhi.
• Tirole Jean (1996): The Theory of Industrial Organisation, Prentice Hall of India Pvt. Ltd.
• Varian, Hal R. (2000): Microeconomic Analysis, New York, W.W. Norton.
• Wilson, A. James (1977): “A Test of the Tragedy of the Commons”, in Garrett Hardin and John Baden, eds., Managing the Commons, San Francisco, W.H. Freeman.
Semester-I
Course No: 402. MICROECONOMIC ANALYSIS -IIA
THE MODERN THEORY OF PRODUCTION
Module 1. General Critique of the Marginal Productivity Theory: The Modelling of General Equilibrium; Sets, Mappings & Relations in Economic Space: Introduction to basic Topological Concepts
Module 2. Linear Production Theory: Fixed Proportions versus Variable Proportions; Factor Substitutability Problems in Linear Production Space: Ricardian and Leontief Models Reconsidered; Definitions of Input Limitativity and Limitationality (Georgescu-Roegen)


For complete syllabus here is the attachment of it....................
Attached Files Available for Download
File Type: doc North Bengal University in Siliguri MA Economics syllabus.doc (332.5 KB, 156 views)

Last edited by Aakashd; June 5th, 2019 at 09:50 AM.
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  #2  
Old September 27th, 2012, 04:22 PM
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Join Date: May 2011
Default Re: Economic Syllabus For North Bengal University In Siliguri

You want M.Com Commerce Economic topic Syllabus of North Bengal University so following is its syllabus:

MANAGERIAL ECONOMICS - I

COURSE- 106
1. Nature & Scope of Managerial Economic: Overview of Theory of Consumer, Theory of Production and Market structure; Overview of Macro-economic system. Tools and technique. Optimization techniques using calculas, game theory.

2. Theory of Consumer Behaviour: Preference relations, choice rules, and the relationship between them. Consumption set, Competitive budget and Demand function. Comparative statics: Wealth effect and Price effect. The weak axioms of Revealed preference and the law of demand. Basic properties of preferences relations. Preference and Utility. Choice under Uncertainty: Expected utility theorem, Money lotteries and Risk Aversion; Demand for Insurance.

3. Market Structure: Monopoly and Patent, Monopoly and product quality, price discrimination under strong monopoly, Hidden information model of price discrimination. Oligopoly: Cournot, Bertrand and Stackleberg in the Game theoretic approach.

4. Limit Pricing Models: Models of Bain, Bhagwati, Modigliani, Poshigian.

I am also uploading M.Com commerce full course syllabus in word file. it is completely free for you so download it freely.
Attached Files Available for Download
File Type: doc North Bengal University M.Com Syllabu.doc (282.0 KB, 36 views)
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Old February 7th, 2015, 12:25 PM
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Default Re: Economic Syllabus For North Bengal University In Siliguri

Will you please provide me the syllabus MA Economics of North Bengal University In Siliguri?
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