Lars Mathiesen

E-mail:

Lars.Mathiesen@nhh.no

Lars Mathiesen

Telephone:

+ 47 55 959 263

Fax:

+47 55 959 543

Title:

Professor, lic.

Nationality:

Norwegian

Teaching languages:

Norwegian, English


Teaching areas:

Undergraduate:

Microeconomics

Master:

Competitive Strategy, Market Analysis

Doctoral courses:

Equilibrium Modelling


Research:

Industrial organization, General equilibrium modelling, Operations research


Selected publications:

  • Climate Policy and the Steel Industry: Achieving Global Emissions Reductions by Incomplete Climate Agreement, The Energy Journal, 25, 4, 2004, 91-114. (With O.Mæstad.)
  • "CO2-stabilisation may be a "no-regrets" policy: A general equilibrium analysis of the Norwegian economy", Environmental and Resource Economics, 9, 1997, 171-198. (With Lars Håkonsen.)
  • "The Impact of Unilateral OECD Carbon Taxes on the Location of Aluminium Smelting", International Journal of Global Energy Issues, 6,1994, 52-61. (With Alan S. Manne.)
  • "Computation of Cournot-Nash Equilibria", Operations Research, 39, 1991, 739-48. (With C.D. Kolstad.)
  • "The European Natural Gas Market. Degrees of Market Power on the Selling Side", in Golombek and Hoel (red.), Natural Gas Markets and Contracts, North Holland Publ. Co., Amsterdam, 1987. (With K. Roland and K. Thonstad.)
  • "Necessary and Sufficient Conditions for Uniqueness of a Cournot Equilibrium", Review of Economic Studies LIV, 1987, 681-690. (With C.D. Kolstad.)
  • "An Algorithm based on a Sequence of Linear Complementarity Problems applied to a Walrasian Equilibrium Model: An Example", Mathematical Programming, 37,1987, 1-18.
  • "Computation of Economic Equilibria by a Sequence of Linear Complementarity Problems", Mathematical Programming Study, 23, 1985, 144-162.
  • "Computational Experience in Solving Equilibrium Models by a Sequence of Linear Complementarity Problems", Operations Research, 33, (1985), 1225-1250.

Visiting professor/visiting scholar:

 

 

Department of Economics, University of California, Santa Barbara, 1999-2000.
Department of Operations Research, Stanford University, 1974-75, 1981-82, 1991-92
 

Other interests/involvements: