600
For graduate students only. This course covers current topics in income inequality and poverty within both developed and developing countries. For both inequality and poverty, students will study the various methods of economic measurement and identify recent dynamic trends. Empirical evidence will be used to scrutinize and explore current theoretical arguments aimed at explaining the trends. The course will analyze contemporary policies at both the country level and within global institutions (IMF, World Bank, bilateral aid programs) aimed at alleviating poverty and lessening inequality, and examine the linkages among inequality, poverty, growth, education technology and globalization.
Credit Hours: 4
Prerequisites
ECO 500.
For graduate students only. The course teaches students to use economic concepts to critically evaluate social, political and business decisions regarding environmental resource use, environmental regulation and environmental degradation. Students will gain insight into how to respond, as business decision-makers, to environmental regulations and to increased global competition for scarce resources.
Credit Hours: 4
Prerequisites
ECO 500 or permission of instructor.
This course provides a survey of econometric methods useful for solving problems within business analytics. By combining econometric techniques with real-world data, students learn to model relevant microeconomic and macroeconomic phenomena ranging from a firms sales forecast and cost function to economy-wide consumption and unemployment. Inferences from the models and their implications on business decisions are drawn from model testing. Each week begins with a Power Point lecture and short reading, which are then followed by on-line labs using data to address real-world problems with econometric software. Students are assessed through quizzes, labs, homework and two exams.
Credit Hours: 4
Prerequisites
QMB 500 and
ECO 501. For graduate students only.
For graduate students only. This course introduces students to the global economic environment within which all modern business firms operate. The external factors considered, which directly or indirectly impact business decision-making and operations, include: domestic and foreign interest rates, exchange rate policies, foreign investment, overseas economic conditions, and international trade and capital flows. A primary objective of the course is to introduce students to major contemporary economic issues that are of international significance.
Credit Hours: 4
Prerequisites
ECO 500
For graduate students only. The course will examine major economic and financial issues related to emerging markets, with a particular emphasis on the BRIC countries (Brazil, Russia, India and China). The following topics will be considered: Economic liberalization program undertaken by emerging markets in recent decades; Growth drivers in the emerging markets; Financial sector challenges facing key emerging markets; and, monetary policy challenges faced by emerging markets.
Credit Hours: 4
Prerequisites
ECO 500
For graduate students only. The Economics of Organizations uses the business-related tenets of economics to generate a modern, consistent, formal framework for strategic decision-making. After introducing intermediate microeconomic theory, the course uses economic intuition to address cost issues ranging from outsourcing to the addition of new product lines, agency issues from explicit contract theory to the multi-task principle and team production, and imperfect competition issues ranging from Bertrand pricing to the assessment of Cournot strategic interactions. The international dimension is integrated throughout the course in establishing the competitive organizational form for the firm given the market in which it competes.
Credit Hours: 4
Prerequisites
ECO 500,
ECO 501 and
MKT 500.
The course aims to provide business students with a broad overview of key topics in international macroeconomics and finance. The following aspects will be emphasized in the course: drivers of long-term economic growth and development; challenges posed by natural resource abundance; international business cycle fluctuations; cross-border interdependence and spillover; causes and consequences of global imbalances; and key aspects of international finance - exchange rates, currency crises, and global monetary system. This course will emphasize applications - usage of basic frameworks of economics to analyze and understand real economic developments.
Credit Hours: 4
A course offered at the discretion of the ECO department. Subject may focus on a topic of current interest in the field, training in a specific area of the field, or a topic that is of interest to a particular group of students.
Credit Hours: 4
Prerequisites
To be specified at time of offering.
For graduate students only. Contemporary topics in economics.
Credit Hours: 1-4
Prerequisites
Minimum 3.5 GPA and written permission of the department chair.