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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Credits: 3 Economic problems in light of current and proposed public policies. Topics include environmental issues, international trade policies, and regulatory issues and their historical roots. Prerequisites Completion or concurrent enrollment in all other general education courses, and ECON 103 and 104; or permission of instructor. Hours of Lecture or Seminar per week 3 Hours of Lab or Studio per week 0
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisites: ECON 103 and 104, or permission of instructor. Monetary, commercial, and central banking systems, with particular emphasis on their relationship with American government programs, fi scal policies, and controls.
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3.00 Credits
Credits: 3 Aggregate economic accounts, including measuring national income; determinants of levels of income and output; and causes and solutions for problems of unemployment, inflation, and economic growth. Prerequisites ECON 103 and 104, or permission of instructor. Hours of Lecture or Seminar per week 3 Hours of Lab or Studio per week 0
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3.00 Credits
Credits: 3 Covers factors contributing to sustained economic growth, emphasizing business fluctuations and their measurement. Prerequisites ECON 310 or 311, or permission of instructor. Hours of Lecture or Seminar per week 3 Hours of Lab or Studio per week 0
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3.00 Credits
Credits: 3 Explores American labor unions and their effect on society, including causes of and proposed solutions to selected problems. Prerequisites ECON 103 and 104, or permission of instructor. Hours of Lecture or Seminar per week 3 Hours of Lab or Studio per week 0
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3.00 Credits
Credits: 3 Defines factors that determine levels of wages and employment, and economic consequences. Emphasizes recent developments in unionism, collective bargaining, and industrial technology. Prerequisites ECON 306. Hours of Lecture or Seminar per week 3 Hours of Lab or Studio per week 0
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3.00 Credits
Credits: 3 Covers intergovernmental financial relationships; types, incidences, and consequences of taxation; other sources of governmental income; governmental expenditures and their effect; public economic enterprises; public borrowing; and debt management and its economic effect. Prerequisites ECON 306 or permission of instructor. Hours of Lecture or Seminar per week 3 Hours of Lab or Studio per week 0
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3.00 Credits
Credits: 3 Microeconomic analysis of environmental problems. Topics include externalities and market failure, alternative solutions and policies, problems in monitoring and enforcement, economic analysis of development of legislation and regulation, and applications to current policy issues. Prerequisites ECON 103 and 104. Hours of Lecture or Seminar per week 3 Hours of Lab or Studio per week 0
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3.00 Credits
Credits: 3 Mathematical treatment of theory of firm and household behavior, stabilization policy, growth theory, input-output analysis, and linear programming. Prerequisites ECON 306 and 311, and MATH 113; or permission of instructor. Hours of Lecture or Seminar per week 3 Hours of Lab or Studio per week 0
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3.00 Credits
Credits: 3 Modern statistical techniques in estimating economic relations. Prerequisites ECON 306 and 311, and OM 210 or STAT 250. Hours of Lecture or Seminar per week 3 Hours of Lab or Studio per week 0
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