TOPICS IN ECONOMICS (EC1091)

Courses on different and emerging topics in the discipline, enriching the present course offerings. These classes are taught by permanent or visiting faculty.

FIRSTBRIDGE IN ECONOMICS (EC1099)

Firstbridge courses are offered to degree seeking freshmen and registration is done via webform in pre-arrival checklist.

TOPICS IN ECONOMICS (EC1910)

Topics vary by semester

MEDIA INDUSTRIES: STRATEGIES, MARKETS & CONSUMERS (EC2003)

Studies the main characteristics of the 'New Economy' and explores the existing linkages between the digital media, technological innovation and the network economy in relation to the market in a national and international context.

PRINCIPLES OF MICROECONOMICS (EC2010)

Focuses on the role played by relative market prices in our society and on the forces of market supply and demand in determining these prices. Since the actions of consumers and firms underlie supply and demand, the course studies in detail the behavior of these two groups.

PRINCIPLES OF MACROECONOMICS (EC2020)

Examines the determinants of the levels of national income, employment, rates of interest, and prices. Studies in detail the instruments of monetary and fiscal policy, highlighting the domestic and international repercussions of their implementation.

INTRO TO INTERNATIONAL ECON. RELATIONS (EC2030)

Deals with the mechanisms of international trade and finance. Topics covered include the theory of trade, commercial policy, the international monetary system, the balance of payments adjustments process, regional economic integration, and the role of international organizations in international economic relations.

THE ECONOMICS AND POLITICS OF INEQUALITY  (EC2045)

This course provides an introduction to the analysis of economic and political inequalities and the interplay between these inequalities and development.

THE COMMONS AND THE MARKET (EC2060)

What are the justifications and implications of using markets, and what arrangements are necessary to establish and protect the commons? This course studies foundational texts of (neo-)liberal economics that aim to legitimize market mechanisms; philosophical treatments and critiques of key concepts, such as rationality and motivation, property and common goods; political analyses of how allocative institutions produce distributional outcomes