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Course Criteria
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1.00 Credits
Contract approved by instructor, advisor, and undergraduate division head is required. Prerequisite: ECON 221 and ECON 222, or ECON 224. CL: 2020.
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3.00 Credits
A study of monetary standards, monetary theory, monetary policy, and the mechanism of international payments. Attention is devoted to questions of monetary problems, employment, and fiscal policy. Prerequisite: ECON 221 and ECON 222, or ECON 224. CL: 2020.
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3.00 Credits
A study of labor market institutions, trends in labor market activity, and the effects of government policy on the labor market. (Not open to majors in economics.) Prerequisite: ECON 221 and ECON 222, or ECON 224. CL: 2020.
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3.00 Credits
A survey of economics from the ancient philosophers to the present; with emphasis on the mercantilist, physiocratic, classical, Marxian, Austrian, neo-classical, and institutional schools of economics. Prerequisite: ECON 221 and ECON 222, or ECON 224. CL: 2020.
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3.00 Credits
A study of the structure of selected American industries, of the development and concentration of economic power in the American economy, and of public policy toward industry. Prerequisite: ECON 221 and ECON 222, or ECON 224. CL: 2020.
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3.00 Credits
Analysis of business cycles and applications of forecasting techniques to project and interpret economic trends. Prerequisite: ECON 221 and ECON 222, or ECON 224. CL: 2020.
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3.00 Credits
Decision making with respect to capital goods, with emphasis on such decision making in governmental activities and public utilities. Intended primarily for engineering students, the course emphasizes the types of investment decisions that engineers are often called upon to make. CL: 2020.
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3.00 Credits
The use of statistical techniques to analyze economic relationships. The emphasis is on the application of linear regression to real-world economic data. Prerequisite: ECON 224, or ECON 221 and ECON 222; MGSC 291 or STAT 201; and MATH 122 or MATH 141. FS: 12/6/2017. CL: 2020.
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3.00 Credits
Examines the foundations of capitalism and why it has prevailed over alternative systems. Topics include the justification of private property, distribution of wealth, profit motive, source of wealth creation, and others. Prerequisite: ECON 211 and ECON 222. ACAF 2.03: 07/05/2019. CL: 2020.
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1.00 Credits
Supervised work experience of at least nine hours per week, to include one class meeting a month and individual consultation. Contract approval by instructor, advisor, and department chair is required. Cannot be used to satisfy major requirement. Prerequisite: C or better in both ECON 321 and ECON 322, and cumulative GPA of 2.75. FS: 12/05/2018. CL: 2020.
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