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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Pr. ECO 101 or 201; 2.0 GPA Economic analysis of technological change. Topics include sources of productivity, inventive activity, entrepreneurship, innovation strategy, R&D management, patenting, and technology assessment. (Same as ENT 312) (Fall)
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3.00 Credits
Pr. MAT 120 or 191, and ECO 201; 2.0 GPA Introduction to mathematical methods in economics. Includes applications of mathematics to consumer and production theory, equilibrium analysis, input-output models, and optimization. (Spring)
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3.00 Credits
Pr. ECO 301; 2.0 GPA The analysis of taxes and expenditures. Topics include: rationale for government (public goods, externalities), expenditure analysis (including income redistribution), tax analysis (including income, sales, and property taxes). (Spring)
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3.00 Credits
Pr. ECO 101 or 201 Economic theory of sports leagues: competitive balance, player labor markets, and owner capital markets. Theories of league expansion, rival leagues, franchise relocation, and sports venues. (Fall & Spring)
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3.00 Credits
Pr. ECO 202; 2.0 GPA Emphasis on legal, institutional, and economic forces which mutually interact to determine supply of money. Elementary monetary theory and monetary flows, institutions, policies, and problems analyzed. International as well as domestic monetary analysis. (Fall)
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3.00 Credits
Pr. ECO 301; admission to Department of Economics or other approved program Intermediate level analysis of national income and employment with attention to fiscal and monetary policy, theories of business fluctuations, and economic growth. (Spring)
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3.00 Credits
Pr. ECO 250; 2.0 GPA Continuation of 250. Multiple regression, time series analysis, simple forecasting, basic econometric models applied to case studies in business, economics, and finance. Use of statistical programs. (Spring)
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3.00 Credits
Pr. ECO 202; 2.0 GPA Analysis of balance of payments and international monetary systems. Monetary and fiscal policies under the gold standard, fixed exchange, and flexible exchange systems. Breakdown of the Bretton Woods system and the current exchange rate policies of central banks. (Spring)
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3.00 Credits
Pr. ECO 101 or 201; 2.0 GPA Study of evolution of European economics from early modern times to the twentieth century. Emphasis on sources of growth: trade, migration, industry, technical change, labor, and capital. (Same as HIS 363.)
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3.00 Credits
Pr. ECO 201 and 202; 2.0 GPA Examines the historical, current and expected future economics of the European Union. Topics include: trade, protectionism, harmonization, labor issues, the Euro, expansion and interrelation with the global economy.
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