300

ECON-30000 Current Topics in Economics

The impact of economics in the contemporary world is discussed, with emphasis on such topics as environmental economics, labor economics, urban and regional economics, the economics of poverty and politics and economics.

3

Prerequisites

ECON 19500 or ECON 20000

ECON-32000 Personnel Economics

Students learn about the economic approaches to human resource management. This course covers such topics as hiring decision; human capital; training decision; job design; incentives and compensation; principle-agent problem; teams; worker empowerment; employment relationship; industrial politics; and performance evaluation.
3

Prerequisites

ECON 19500 or ECON 20000, and ECON 20100

ECON-33000 Government and Business

This course covers anti-trust laws and their relation to the federal trade, federal power and federal aviation commissions; the anti-trust division of the Justice Department; and changing attitudes of the courts; and the effect of regulation of business activity.

3

Prerequisites

ECON 19500 or ECON 20000, and ECON 20100

ECON-33500 Money and Banking

Students explore principles of money and credit, commercial banking, central banking, the Federal Reserve System, theories of the value of money, money and business cycles, monetary and fiscal policy, and international banking.

3

Prerequisites

ECON 19500 or ECON 20000

ECON-34500 International Economics

Theories of international trade are discussed, as well as international movement of trade and labor; the nature of tariffs, quotas, and other trade restrictions; the commercial policies of the United States; international monetary relations; balance of payments and transfer problems; international currency and monetary systems; and international economic relations.

3

Prerequisites

ECON 19500 or ECON 20000

ECON-34600 Business-Government Relations in the Global Economy

The role of government, the extent of government involvement in the economy, and the business-government relationship varies from country to country. This course examines how and why business-government relationships and government involvement varies between countries and how this knowledge and understanding benefits international business managers and international relations analysts.

Different political and economic ideologies and perspectives are introduced. The role of government, the extent to which government gets involved in the economy, and government involvement affects businesses in European, Asian, and Latin American contexts are explored. The student will also be introduced to political risk and country risk analysis. Emphasis will be on student participation and the integration of knowledge and skills learned in other courses. This course is a requirement for all International Business majors and is an option for International Relations and Contemporary Global Studies majors.
3

Prerequisites

ECON 19500 or ECON 20000

ECON-36100 Intermediate Income Theory

This course covers such topics as national income measurement; fiscal-monetary policy; public finance; national income and the price level; business cycles; inflation; economic growth; and international aspects of income analysis.

3

Prerequisites

ECON 19500 or ECON 20000, and ECON 20100

ECON-36200 Intermediate Price Theory

Students examine indifference curve analysis, cost analysis from an economic point of view, theoretical structures of pricing and output determination in business and unions.

3

Prerequisites

ECON 19500 or ECON 20000, and ECON 20100

ECON-39001 Wksp: Economics of Investing

Many theories of investment analysis exist in Economics. They in many cases require use and understanding of economic data.  They require the investor to determine his other preference for risk. This seminar will explore step by step the necessary economics theory, data, and risk analysis required to become a successful long-term investor.
1