2021/2022 KAN-COECV2000U Irrationality, Economics and Finance: A Behavioral and Experimental Approach
English Title | |
Irrationality, Economics and Finance: A Behavioral and Experimental Approach |
Course information |
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Language | English |
Course ECTS | 7.5 ECTS |
Type | Elective |
Level | Full Degree Master |
Duration | One Semester |
Start time of the course | Autumn |
Timetable | Course schedule will be posted at calendar.cbs.dk |
Max. participants | 60 |
Study board |
Study Board for MSc in Advanced Economics and
Finance
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Course coordinator | |
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Teaching methods | |
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Last updated on 07-05-2021 |
Relevant links |
Learning objectives | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Students having sucessfully participated in the
course are able to:
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Course prerequisites | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
1. Please note that this course is taught at
elite level. A sound knowledge of microeconomics, game theory,
finance, and corporate finance is required.
2. Please send in a 1 page motivational letter arguing why you want to participate and how you would contribute to the course through discussions and presentations, and a 1 page graduate grade transcript to ily.stu@cbs.dk before the registration deadline for elective courses. You may find the registration deadlines on my.cbs.dk ( https://studentcbs.sharepoint.com/graduate/pages/registration-for-electives.aspx ) Please also remember to sign up through the online registration.. |
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Examination | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Course content, structure and pedagogical approach | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
What are the challenges of traditional theories in economics? How can we test hypotheses that challenge mainstream economics? This course will study and compare classical and behavioral economics theories and review the available evidence in favor and against each approach. Furthermore, the course will provide the students with the tools necessary to pose behavioral hypotheses and test them in controlled economic experiment or research designs that allow for causal identification. The course will provide students with the necessary tools to understand many important current policy issues such as public policy and behavioral responses to climate change, ESG investing, health-related behaviors, investment decisions, and many others.
The goals are to enable students to become consumers of the empirical literature on behavioral and experimental economics and give them tools to become active contributors of original and testable ideas to improve financial/economic choices as well as the activities, processes, and organizational architecture of their future workplaces. Finally, as potential concrete benefit to students of taking the course, a significant number of past students have used the final assignment for the course as a starting point for their master thesis. |
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Description of the teaching methods | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
The course has 36 hours of 18 sessions. In some weeks, the class activities will be extended to include experiments, student workshops, student presentations online, and exercises. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Feedback during the teaching period | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
We provide continuous feedback to students such
that they can understand the concepts covered in the course and
learn how to apply them both to research projects and real life
situations/problems. This continuous feedback is a key cornerstone
of the learning process in the course.
Feedback takes the form of discussions of research ideas that students identify themselves according to their interests. This creates student-motivated discussions (in class or online) in which other fellow students and instructors provide valuable feedback to refine and improve research ideas that eventually students have to crystalize in a written research project to be delivered at the end of the semesters. Instructors also strive to give students additional personalized feedback on research ideas/research project to students in the form of office hours, online synchronous meetings, written feedback and in class discussions. The main idea is to provide students with as much as feedback as possible such that at the end of the semester students have a well-refined research idea that they can implement in a research project. |
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Student workload | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Expected literature | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Most of the material covered during the course will be in the
form of research papers and chapters of selected books. Below you
will find a list of additional suggested readings that we might
also use in the course.
Baddeley, M. 2013. Behavioral Economics and Finance (New York: Rutledge). Camerer, C.F., Loewenstein, G. and Rabin, M. eds. 2003. Advances in Behavioral Economics. Princeton University Press. Kahneman, Daniel, and Amos Tversky, eds. 2000. Choices, Values and Frames. Cambridge University Press. Pompian, M.M. 2006. Behavioral Finance and Wealth Management. Wiley: New Jersey. Shefrin, H. 2008. A Behavioral Approach to Asset Pricing Theory, Elsevier. Second edition. Shleifer, A. 2000. Inefficient Capital Markets: An Introduction
to Behavioral Finance. Oxford UP.
Thaler, R. 1994. The Winner's Curse: Paradoxes and Anomalies of Economic Life. Princeton, N. J.: Princeton University Press. |