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COURSE OUTLINE

Microeconomics of Banking

1. General

School

School of Finance and Statistics

Academic Unit

Department of Banking and Financial Management

Level of Studies

Undergraduate

Course code

ΧΡΤΜΙ01

Semester

5th or 7th

Course Title

Microeconomics of Banking

Idependent Teaching Activities

Weekly Teaching Hours

Credits

Lectures
4
7,5

Course Type

Special Background

Prerequite Courses

Language of Instruction and Examinations

Greek

Is the course offered to Erasmus Students?

Url (Eclass)

https://eclass.unipi.gr/courses/XTD151/

2. Learning Outcomes

Learning Outcomes

This course introduces the microeconomic foundations of modern banking and financial intermediation. We emphasize the presentation of models under asymmetric information. In this context, we present models that contemplate the incentives in debt contracts, the decision-making of bank managers, and the role of regulatory authorities for financial stability.

With the successful completion of the course, students will be sufficiently capable to

  • understand and apply the microeconomic analysis in the context f credit, and especially of banking markets
  • assess the micro-foundations of banking markets in a strategic context
  • understand the developments in the modern banking environment
General Competences
  • Decision making,
  • Working independently,
  • Production of new research ideas
  • Production of free, creative, and inductive thinking
  • Production of critical thinking

3. Syllabus

  • Overview of microeconomic theory
  • Market structure of banking sector. The Klein-Monti model
  • Credit rationing
  • The bank as a liquidity provider. The Diamond-Dybvig model
  • The transmission of financial crises
  • Spatial models of banking
  • Moral Hazard in debt contracts
  • Adverse selection in debt contracts
  • The OLG model

4. Teaching and Learning Methods - Evaluation

Delivery

Face-to-face

Use of Information and Communications Technology

  • Interaction in class with students.
  • Use of ICT in teaching.
  • Use of ICT in problem solving

Teaching Methods

Activity

Semester Workload

Lectures
52
Independent Study
73,5
Problems Sets
62
Course Total
187,5

Student Performance Evaluation

Final exam  100%

Open book exam

Language of evaluation: Greek

5. Attached Bibliography

Suggested Bibliography

Dimitris Voliotis, Lecture Notes

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