• Help
Economics NetworkThe Economics Network
  • Home
  • Lecturer resources
  • Learning materials
  • Projects
  • News & Events
  • Topics
  • Sub-disciplines
  • About us

Lecture Slides

Home » Learning Materials » Online Learning Materials

Introductory

Principles (General) (9 links)
Principles of Macroeconomics (12 links)
Principles of Microeconomics (11 links)
Maths for Economists (2 links)
Statistics for Economists (2 links)

Intermediate

Intermediate Macroeconomics (3 links)
Intermediate Microeconomics (12 links)
Agricultural Economics (1 link)
Consumption and Households (1 link)
Econometrics (2 links)
Economic Growth (3 links)
Economic History (2 links)
Environmental and Transport Economics (2 links)
European Economics (1 link)
Experimental Economics (2 links)
Financial Economics (5 links)
Game Theory (5 links)
History of Economic Thought (2 links)
Industrial Economics (5 links)
International Economics (4 links)
Labour Economics, Employment and Unemployment (2 links)
Managerial and Business Economics (8 links)
Mathematical Economics (2 links)
Monetary Economics (2 links)
Political Economy (1 link)
Public-sector Economics and Public Choice Theory (1 link)
Regional and Urban Economics (1 link)
Specific economies or countries (1 link)
Structural and Institutional Economics (1 link)
Other topics (4 links)

Advanced

Advanced Applied Economics (1 link)
Advanced Econometrics and Quantitative Techniques (3 links)

Latest Addition:

Strategic Game Theory for Managers, Term 3, 2009
Bob Marks, Australian Graduate School of Management

Archived handouts, slides and exercises from a 2009 course, organised around 21 lectures. The course contains many case studies.

Game Theory, Managerial and Business Economics

 

  • 11622 reads
  • Online Materials
  • Online Sources
  • Online Data
  • Question Bank
Quickjump to:

Monthly Email Updates

from the Economics Network
Home | Top
Share this page: Email, Twitter, LinkedIn, Facebook, (more)

Copyright 2013
University of Bristol
Supported by the Royal Economic Society,
the Scottish Economic Society, the LSE and University of Exeter

Team member? Log in