Game Theory III

Undergraduate | 2026

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Area/Catalogue
ECON 3023
Course ID icon
Course ID
206000
Level of study
Level of study
Undergraduate
Unit value icon
Unit value
6
Course level icon
Course level
3
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Inbound study abroad and exchange
Inbound study abroad and exchange
The fee you pay will depend on the number and type of courses you study.
No
University-wide elective icon
University-wide elective course
No
Single course enrollment
Single course enrolment
No
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Note:
Course data is interim and subject to change

Course overview

This course provides an introduction to Game Theory. Game Theory is a mathematical framework which makes possible the analysis of the decision making process of interdependent subjects. It is aimed at explaining and predicting how individuals behave in a specific strategic situation, and therefore help improve decision making. A situation is strategic if the outcome of a decision problem depends on the choices of more than one person. Most decision problems in real life are strategic. The course will explain in depth the standard equilibrium concepts (such as Nash Equilibrium, Subgame-Perfect Nash Equilibrium, and others) in Game Theory. To illustrate the concepts, real-world examples, case studies, and classroom experiments might be used.

Course learning outcomes

  • Identify strategic situations and represent them as games
  • Solve simple games using various techniques
  • Analyse economic situations using game theoretic techniques
  • Recommend and prescribe which strategies to implement

Prerequisite(s)

N/A

Corequisite(s)

N/A

Antirequisite(s)

N/A