Teaching
Current courses
Introduction to Public Choice and Welfare Economics
This course examines the economic foundations of public policy, focusing on how different normative frameworks define welfare, why market failures and social dilemmas arise, and how policy interventions can address them, while accounting for strategic behaviour, institutional constraints, and ethical considerations in real-world policymaking.
Intermediate Economics I
This course provides an intermediate-level foundation in microeconomics, focusing on how consumers, firms, and markets make decisions, and developing the analytical tools needed to study consumer choice, firm behaviour, market structures, and strategic interaction through game theory, with an emphasis on applying theory to real-world economic problems and policy analysis.
Games and Behaviour
This course examines decision-making under risk and uncertainty, including deviations from standard expected utility theory, and studies how such behaviour shapes strategic interaction using the tools of game theory, with applications to oligopoly markets where firms compete and coordinate under interdependence and incentives.
Introduction to Economic and Financial Analysis
This course provides a foundation in the mathematical tools used in economics and finance, covering algebra, functions, calculus, and optimisation, with an emphasis on applying these methods to economic models and problems, and complementing analytical skills with basic Python programming for computational problem-solving.