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ECON 201: Introduction to Macroeconomics
5.00 Credits
Eastern Washington University
[completion of the sequence ECON 200 and 201 satisfies the GECR for social sciences, list 1, economics and government; counts as one course.] Prerequisite: MATH 104 completed. Reviews national income accounts and the determinants of national income and employment for an economy. Explores the impact of monetary and fiscal policy on aggregate performance and considers specific problems such as full employment, inflation, economic growth and international economic relations.
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ECON 201 - Introduction to Macroeconomics
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ECON 300: Microeconomics
5.00 Credits
Eastern Washington University
FALL/WINTER/SPRING Prerequisite: MATH 104 completed. Accelerated introduction to microeconomics for students in professional programs; substitutes for ECON 200.
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ECON 300 - Microeconomics
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ECON 301: Macroeconomics
5.00 Credits
Eastern Washington University
FALL/WINTER/SPRING Prerequisite: MATH 104 completed. Accelerated introduction to macroeconomics for students in professional programs; substitutes for ECON 201.
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ECON 301 - Macroeconomics
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ECON 399: Special Studies
3.00 - 5.00 Credits
Eastern Washington University
Prerequisites: ECON 200 and 201 or instructor permission. Subjects studied vary according to faculty and student interest.
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ECON 399 - Special Studies
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ECON 404: Intermediate Microeconomic Theory
5.00 Credits
Eastern Washington University
FALL/WINTER/SPRING Prerequisites: ECON 200 and 201 or instructor permission. Theoretical basis of exchange, production, private markets and their forms, income distribution, the public sector, resource allocation, welfare economics and application of economic theory to public and private decision making.
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ECON 404 - Intermediate Microeconomic Theory
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ECON 405: Intermediate Macroeconomic Theory
5.00 Credits
Eastern Washington University
FALL/SPRING Prerequisites: ECON 200 and 201 or instructor permission. With references to recent experiences, a theoretical framework is developed to explain the determination of output, employment, price level, interest rate and economic growth of an aggregate economy. Using case studies, policy implications and alternatives are explored.
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ECON 405 - Intermediate Macroeconomic Theory
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ECON 412: Economic History of the United States
5.00 Credits
Eastern Washington University
SPRING Prerequisite: Junior standing. Economic development of the United States from the early colonial period to the present; explorations, westward movement, labor, rise of great industries, world trade and post-war economic problems. (Crosslisted HIST 487)
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ECON 412 - Economic History of the United States
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ECON 415: History of Economic Thought
5.00 Credits
Eastern Washington University
Prerequisite: Junior standing. Economic thought to the early 20th century; special attention to selected writers including Aristotle, the Mercantilists, the Physiocrats, Hume, Smith, Malthus, Ricardo, Marx, the Marginalists and Marshall.
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ECON 415 - History of Economic Thought
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ECON 417: Political Economy
5.00 Credits
Eastern Washington University
Prerequisite: Junior standing. How public decisions can be made more rational, more productive of welfare, or more in the general interest. Selected literature from economics, political science and related disciplines provides an analytical framework for the discussion of a number of social problems.
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ECON 417 - Political Economy
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ECON 420: Labor History
5.00 Credits
Eastern Washington University
Prerequisite: Junior standing. A chronological examination of labor movements in the United States. Focuses on trade union activity and the impact unions have had on their members and society. Draws occasional examples from European and Latin American labor history for purpose of comparison and examines various labor history theories. (Cross-listed HIST 489)
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ECON 420 - Labor History
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