Course Description
Microeconomics C, ECON 100C
Analysis of the effects of imperfect market structure, strategy, and imperfect information.
Key Information
Credit: 4 quarter units /
2.67 semester units credit
UC San Diego, ECON
Course Credit:
Upon successful completion, all online courses offered through cross-enrollment provide UC unit credit. Some courses are approved for GE, major preparation and/or, major credit or can be used as a substitute for a course at your campus.If "unit credit" is listed by your campus, consult your department, academic adviser or Student Affairs division to inquire about the petition process for more than unit credit for the course.
UC Berkeley:
Unit Credit
UC Davis:
Course Equivalence: Equivalent to: ECON 100A/100B/100C at UCSD together equivalent to ECN100 at UCD
UC Irvine:
Course Equivalence: Equivalent to: UCSD ECON 100ABC = ECON 100 A - B
UC Los Angeles:
Unit Credit
UC Merced:
Unit Credit (see your Academic Advisor)
UC Riverside:
Course Equivalence: ECON 104B
UC San Diego:
General Education: GE credit for other students, elective course, Revelle Social Science; Sixth - Social Analysis; TMC 1 course toward upper division disciplinary breadth if noncontiguous to major, Seventh - 1 course towards Alternatives - Social Science
Major Requirement: Major requirement for all econ majors
UC San Francisco:
Pending
UC Santa Barbara:
Course Equivalence: Econ 100C at UCSB
UC Santa Cruz:
Unit Credit
Prerequisites
ECON 100B Microeconomics B
Course Fees
None
Course Creator

Joel Watson
Joel Watson is an economic theorist who specializes in developing game theoretic models of contractual settings. His work addresses topics in several applied areas, including labor and macroeconomics, international economics, and the law. Watson is also the CEO of EconJobMarket.org, a non-profit company that serves as the central repository for advertisements, applications, and letters of recommendation for the academic economics job market. Watson has served as an editor and/or board member for the B.E. Journal of Theoretical Economics, Games and Economic Behavior, and the International Journal of Game Theory. His book Strategy: An Introduction to Game Theory is a popular text for advanced undergraduates and first-year graduate students. |

Joel Watson is an economic theorist who specializes in developing game theoretic models of contractual settings. His work addresses topics in several applied areas, including labor and macroeconomics, international economics, and the law. Watson is also the CEO of EconJobMarket.org, a non-profit company that serves as the central repository for advertisements, applications, and letters of recommendation for the academic economics job market. Watson has served as an editor and/or board member for the B.E. Journal of Theoretical Economics, Games and Economic Behavior, and the International Journal of Game Theory. His book Strategy: An Introduction to Game Theory is a popular text for advanced undergraduates and first-year graduate students. |
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