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Nov 21, 2024
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ECON 333 - Behavioral EconomicsSemester Offered: Spring 1 unit(s) A survey of the empirical and experimental evidence that human behavior often deviates from the predictions made by models that assume full rationality. This course combines economics, psychology, and experimental methods to explore impulsivity, impatience, overconfidence, reciprocity, fairness, the enforcement of social norms, the effects of status, addiction, the myopia that people exhibit when having to plan for the future, and other behaviors which deviate from economic rationality. Mr. Ho.
Prerequisite: ECON 201 and ECON 209 .
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