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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
No course description available.
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3.00 Credits
An introduction to economics, with particular attention to the pricing mechanism, competitive and monopolistic markets, government regulation of the economy, labor-management relations and programs, income determination and public policy, trade and the international economy.
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3.00 Credits
An introduction to economics, with particular attention to the pricing mechanism, competitive and monopolistic markets, government regulation of the economy, labor-management relations and programs, income determination and public policy, trade and the international economy.
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3.00 Credits
A continuation of introduction to economics with emphasis on the measurement of national economic perfomance, alternative explanations of short-run economic fluctuations and long-run economic growth, money and credit, fiscal and monetary policy.
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1.00 Credits
This one credit course examines poverty in rural America to determine in what ways it is similar and in what ways it is distinct from poverty in urban American settings.
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3.00 Credits
The objective of the course will be to familiarize students with the concept of development, the incidence of underdevelopment, some major theoretical controversies, and specific policy issues with examples drawn especially from Latin America. The course will explore the complex connections between theory, policy, and practice. At the end of the course students will be able to identify the contribution of economic tools to development policies, examine these tools within the context of actual agenda-setting, and make inroads into the challenge of incorporating institutional and ethical considerations into the design and implementation of development policies.
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3.00 Credits
A survey of the principles of price theory that focuses on: the determination of prices and quantities in individual markets, market interdependence, market structure, market failures, government policies and international trade.
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3.00 Credits
An introduction to the basic principles of the macroeconomy such as: national income accounting, determination of national income, business cycles, inflation, unemployment, fiscal and monetary policy, macroeconomics in the open economy and economic growth.
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3.00 Credits
"ECON 10020 Principles of Macroeconomics at UCD;This module provides an introduction to macroeconomic principles. The topics covered are: national income accounting, economic growth, short-run determination of national income, money and banking, inflation, unemployment, exchanges rates and the open economy, fiscal and monetary policy. On completion of this module students should be able to: Develop their analytical skills through the application of macroeconomic theory to problems and case studies. Understand of the determinants of aggregate economic activity and the role of macroeconomic policy in stabilising the economy."
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3.00 Credits
The purpose of this course is to introduce students to some of the most important current topics in economics. The course presents these topics in an analytical framework so students can learn the economics behind the issues. In that sense the course will be more demanding than reading the newspaper. The focus of the course will be macroeconomics, but knowledge of microeconomics and empirical skills will be useful to students.
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