ECON 210 : Introduction to Agricultural Economics.
(3:3:0)(Credit Hours:Lecture Hours:Lab Hours)| OFFERED: | F |
| PREREQUISITE: | Econ 110 or equivalent. |
| DESCRIPTION: | Economic principles and policies applied to producing and allocating agricultural products. |
ECON 215 : History of Economic Thought.
(3:3:0)(Credit Hours:Lecture Hours:Lab Hours)| PREREQUISITE: | Econ 110 or equivalent. |
| DESCRIPTION: | Development of economic doctrines from preclassical through contemporary economics. Contributions of individual writers and schools of thought. |
ECON 230 : Economic Development and Growth.
(3:3:0)(Credit Hours:Lecture Hours:Lab Hours)| PREREQUISITE: | Econ 110 or equivalent. |
| DESCRIPTION: | Problems and processes of economic growth and development, emphasizing less-developed nations. |
ECON 257 : International Trade and Finance.
(3:3:0)(Credit Hours:Lecture Hours:Lab Hours)| PREREQUISITE: | Econ 110 or equivalent. |
| DESCRIPTION: | Economic analysis of the mechanisms, problems, institutions, and policies of trade among countries. Financial and monetary arrangements that facilitate trade. |
ECON 274 : American Economic History.
(3:3:0)(Credit Hours:Lecture Hours:Lab Hours)| PREREQUISITE: | Econ 110 or equivalent. |
| DESCRIPTION: | Impact on households, firms, and government of America's transformation from a rural, agricultural colony to a major industrial nation. |
ECON 275 : Public Finance.
(3:3:0)(Credit Hours:Lecture Hours:Lab Hours)| PREREQUISITE: | Econ 110 or equivalent. |
| DESCRIPTION: | Economics of decision making in the public sector; cost-benefit analysis and efficiency-equity issues of taxation and expenditure policies. |
ECON 420 : Economics of Antitrust Law and Regulation.
(3:3:0)(Credit Hours:Lecture Hours:Lab Hours)| PREREQUISITE: | Econ 380. |
| RECOMMENDED: | Econ 382. |
| DESCRIPTION: | Economic analysis of reasons for--and effects of--antitrust laws and regulation in selected areas, including utilities, telecommunications, transportation, energy, health, safety, and the environment. |
ECON 421 : Law and Economics.
(3:3:0)(Credit Hours:Lecture Hours:Lab Hours)| PREREQUISITE: | Econ 378, 380. |
| DESCRIPTION: | Common law allocative mechanisms (contract, tort, and property law) as alternatives to collective intervention when markets fail; consideration of economic logic of law. |
ECON 432 : Economic Growth.
(3:3.0:0.0)(Credit Hours:Lecture Hours:Lab Hours)| PREREQUISITE: | Econ 380, 381. |
| RECOMMENDED: | Econ 388. |
| DESCRIPTION: | Theory and evidence relating to economic growth, including physical and human capital accumulation, population, technological change, institutions, and government. |
ECON 440 : Natural Resources and Environmental Economics.
(3:3:0)(Credit Hours:Lecture Hours:Lab Hours)| PREREQUISITE: | Econ 380; 388 or concurrent enrollment. |
| DESCRIPTION: | Economic theory applied to allocation of natural resources and environmental amenities. Issues relating to externalities, common property resources, public goods, allocation of depletable natural resources over time, economic factors of environmental polarization, and others. |
ECON 450 : Financial Economics.
(3:3:0)(Credit Hours:Lecture Hours:Lab Hours)| PREREQUISITE: | Econ 380, 382, 388. |
| DESCRIPTION: | Theory of financial economics, emphasizing capital markets, investment decisions, choice, capital asset pricing model, futures and options markets, efficient markets, and capital structures. |
ECON 453 : Monetary Theory and Policy.
(3:3:0)(Credit Hours:Lecture Hours:Lab Hours)| PREREQUISITE: | Econ 380, 381; 388 or concurrent enrollment. |
| DESCRIPTION: | Macroeconomic aspects of money demand, money supply, the monetary transmission mechanism, central bank policy, and other current issues. |
ECON 458 : International Trade Theory and Applications.
(3:3:0)(Credit Hours:Lecture Hours:Lab Hours)| PREREQUISITE: | Econ 380. |
| DESCRIPTION: | Microeconomic analysis of why nations trade, who wins and loses from trade, and the costs and benefits of various trade policies. |
ECON 459 : International Monetary Theory.
(3:3:0)(Credit Hours:Lecture Hours:Lab Hours)| PREREQUISITE: | Econ 380, 381, 388. |
| DESCRIPTION: | Monetary and macroeconomic aspects of international relations dealing primarily with short-run balance-of-payments disequilibrium and adjustments. |
ECON 465 : Health Economics.
(3:3:0)(Credit Hours:Lecture Hours:Lab Hours)| PREREQUISITE: | Econ 382; 388 or concurrent enrollment. |
| DESCRIPTION: | Economic models of health-care markets, including the supply and demand for health and health care, insurance, market imperfections, public-sector involvement, and regulation. |
ECON 468 : Urban Economics.
(3:3:0)(Credit Hours:Lecture Hours:Lab Hours)| PREREQUISITE: | Econ 380; 388 or concurrent enrollment. |
| DESCRIPTION: | Economic models relating to spatial location of economic activities and development of cities. Application of economic theory to problems and policies associated with housing, urban transportation, congestion, local government finance, and other urban problems. |
ECON 478 : Game Theory and Economics.
(3:3:0)(Credit Hours:Lecture Hours:Lab Hours)| PREREQUISITE: | Econ 380; 388 or concurrent enrollment. |
| DESCRIPTION: | Application of game theory to study strategic interaction between individuals and organizations. Applications include imperfect competition, insurance markets, and bargaining. |
ECON 482 : Welfare Economics.
(3:3.0:0.0)(Credit Hours:Lecture Hours:Lab Hours)| PREREQUISITE: | Econ 378, 380, 382; or equivalents. |
| DESCRIPTION: | General equilibrium theorems and considerations that must guide applied economic work and provide quantitative information on the effects of alternative policy measures. |
ECON 486 : Mathematical Economics.
(3:3:0)(Credit Hours:Lecture Hours:Lab Hours)| PREREQUISITE: | Econ 378, 380. |
| DESCRIPTION: | Further development of optimization and comparative statics. Differential equations and dynamic analysis. |
ECON 581 : Advanced Macroeconomics.
(3:3:0)(Credit Hours:Lecture Hours:Lab Hours)| OFFERED: | F or W |
| PREREQUISITE: | Econ 380, 381, 382, 388; or equivalents. |
| DESCRIPTION: | Theory of determining national income, employment, inflation, and interest rates. Issues of economic fluctuations, economic growth, and monetary and fiscal policy. |
ECON 586 : Advanced Mathematics for Economists.
(3:3:0)(Credit Hours:Lecture Hours:Lab Hours)| PREREQUISITE: | Econ 380, Math 214; or equivalents. |
| DESCRIPTION: | Advanced mathematical methods that have proved useful in economic modeling. |
ECON 588 : Econometrics.
(3:3:0)(Credit Hours:Lecture Hours:Lab Hours)| OFFERED: | F or W |
| PREREQUISITE: | Econ 380, 381, 382, 388; or equivalents. |
| DESCRIPTION: | Theory and practice of formulating, estimating, and analyzing economic models. |
Note 1: The 200-level field courses are intended as interim courses as a student moves from Econ 110 into the 300-level core courses. Once the student has completed Econ 380, he or she is strongly encouraged to take the 400-level rather than the 200-level field courses.
Note 2: Students should not take both a 200-level and a 400-level course with the same last two digits (e.g., Econ 275 and 475), although they are encouraged to take the 300- and 500-level theory classes (e.g., Econ 380 and 580).