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Course Criteria
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1.00 Credits
The study of basic economic principles pertains to the operation of the pricing system, income distribution, national income analysis, and monetary and fiscal policy. 1.00 units, Lecture
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1.00 Credits
A study of resource allocation and product distribution in a market system. Market behavior is analyzed in terms of the determinants of demand, supply, the logic of the productive process, and the institutional structure of markets. 1.00 units, Lecture
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1.00 Credits
An analysis of aggregate income, output, and employment, which includes the following topics: national economic accounts, theories of consumption, investment and money, Keynesian and Classical models, the monetary-fiscal debate, inflation, unemployment and growth. 1.00 units, Lecture
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1.00 Credits
Review of concepts and methodology in financial accounting. Particular attention is devoted to the exploration of different accounting measurement theories and the impact these theories have on corporate financial reporting. Ability to interpret, analyze, and evaluate financial accounting information is developed through problems and cases stressing the preparation, utility, and limitations of such information. 1.00 units, Lecture
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0.00 Credits
An examination of the Federal budget, of the tax system of the United States, and of Fiscal Federalism, with special reference to the allocation, distribution, and stabilization objectives of specific taxes and expenditures. Analyses of the theory of public goods and ofexternalities, of private market failure, and of government corrective action. Actual policies will be evaluated in the context of the analytical framework developed in the course. Prerequisite: Economics 803. 1.00 units, Lecture
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1.00 Credits
No Course Description Available. 1.00 units, Lecture
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3.00 Credits
The development of the business unit, working capital management, capital budgeting, cost of capital; portfolio theory; corporation securities; the securities markets; mergers and reorganization. Prerequisite: Economics 803. 1.00 units, Lecture
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0.00 Credits
The nature, significance, and functions of money; monetary standards; the role and operations of commercial banks; central banking and the Federal Reserve System; the Treasury and the money market; foreign exchange and international finance; monetary theory. Graduate Prerequisite: Economics 805. Undergraduate prerequisite: C- or better in Economics 301 and Economics 302. Permission of Instructor required. 1.00 units, Lecture
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0.00 Credits
An introduction to the basic mathematical tools of economics, including differentiation, optimization, constrained optimization, and comparative statics. The class will stress not only the ability to solve given models but also to formulate models independently. Additional topics may include linear programming, game theory and differential equations. Note: Prerequisite: ECON 803. 1.00 units, Lecture
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0.00 Credits
This course will emphasize the role of financial institutions in affecting the flow of funds through the money and capital markets. Topics include: the portfolio behavior of financial intermediaries, the yield curve and term structure of interest rates, an analysis of short-term Federal Reserve behavior and its impact on the financial markets, seasonal liquidity patterns and their impact on the financial system, techniques of financial market forecasting, the efficient market hypothesis, and the role of rational expectations. Prerequisite: Economics 803. 1.00 units, Lecture
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