ECON 110 PRINCIPLES OF MICROECONOMICS (3)
Three hours lecture per week
The application of economic reasoning to the decisions of consumers and producers. Topics include opportunity cost, resource allocation, the price system, the organization of industry, market failures, distribution of income, public sector economics.
GenEd: D
ECON 111 PRINCIPLES OF MACROECONOMICS (3)
Three hours lecture per week
Study of the workings of the economy. Topics include national income accounting, business cycles, employment and unemployment, inflation, economic growth, financial institutions, fiscal and monetary policy, and international trade.
GenEd: D
ECON 300 FUNDAMENTALS OF ECONOMICS (3)
Three hours lecture per week
Basic economic training for citizens who wish to exercise a reasoned judgment about economic issues in public affairs. Content generally same as ECON 110, 111 in condensed form. Not open to students with credit in ECON 110 or 111.
GenEd: D
ECON 310 INTERMEDIATE MICROECONOMICS (3)
Three hours lecture per week
Prerequisite: ECON 110, ECON 111 and MATH 140 or MATH 150
Economic analysis of the decisions of consumers and producers. Emphasis on the theory of consumer behavior, the theory of the firm, price and output determination in various market structures, factor markets and externalities.
ECON 311 INTERMEDIATE MACROECONOMICS (3)
Three hours lecture per week
Prerequisite: ECON 110, ECON 111 and MATH 140 or MATH 150
Determinants of levels of national income, employment, and price levels. Analysis of secular and cyclical changes in economic activity, and the effects of monetary and fiscal policies on these changes.
ECON 320 MONEY AND BANKING (3)
Three hours lecture per week
Prerequisite: ECON 110, ECON 111 and MATH 140 or MATH 150
Nature and functions of money and its relation to prices; the monetary system of the United States; the functions of banks, bank credit, foreign exchange and monetary control. The impact of monetary policy on economic activity.
ECON 329 MANAGERIAL ECONOMICS (3)
Three hours lecture per week
Prerequisite: ECON 110, ECON 111 and MATH 140 or MATH 150
Development of the tools of marginal analysis and their application to managerial decisions and planning. Topics include demand analysis, production and cost, pricing and output decisions under different market structures. Product and factor markets will be analyzed.
ECON 331 NARRATIVES OF THE WORKING CLASS (3)
Three hours lecture per week
Examines the lives of working people using various thematic approaches and disciplinary methodologies. Materials include literature, film, and case studies.
Same as ENGL 331, SOC 331, HIST 331, POLS 331
GenEd: C2, D, Interdisciplinary
ECON 333 NONPROFIT ORGANIZATIONS (3)
Three hours lecture per week
Issues unique to nonprofit organizations including financial, legal, and political.
Same as POLS 333, COMM 333, BUS 333
GenEd: D, Interdisciplinary
ECON 340 BUSINESS AND ECONOMICS IN AMERICAN LITERATURE (3)
Three hours lecture/discussion per week
Explores the ways in which business and economics have been represented in American literature. Employs critical methodologies from the fields of Business, Economics, and Literary studies.
Same as BUS 340, ENGL 340
GenEd: C2, D, Interdisciplinary
ECON 341 DRUG DISCOVERY AND DEVELOPMENT (3)
Three hours lecture per week
How are drugs discovered? What determines the price for a drug? What is the difference between a generic and non-generic drug? These questions will be examined with an interdisciplinary approach. Topics include the isolation of compounds from natural sources, the screening of compounds for biological activity, structure-activity relationships of drugs, computer-assisted drug design, combinatorial chemistry, bioinformatics, the FDA approval process for new drugs, and the economic and business aspects of pharmaceutical investment and development.
Same as CHEM 341, BUS 341
GenEd: B1, D, Interdisciplinary
ECON 342 THE ZOO: CONSERVATION, EDUCATION AND RECREATION (3)
Three hours lecture per week
An interdisciplinary study of zoos and zoological gardens from scientific, managerial, business, recreational and educational perspectives. Analyzes how these perspectives are linked within zoo practices. The course will include an in-depth case study of a local zoo. Field trips to local zoos will be required.
Same as BIOL 342, BUS 342, EDUC 342
GenEd: D, Interdisciplinary
ECON 343 CAPITAL THEORY (3)
Three hours lecture per week
Intertemporal choice and decision-making under uncertainty in our financial lives. Topics include: multi-period consumption, multi-period production, capital budgeting, modern portfolio theory and financial management.
Same as FIN 343
GenEd: D, Interdisciplinary
ECON 344 THE LIBRARY: COLLECTIONS, SERVICES & INSTRUCTION (3)
Three hours lecture per week
A study of university, school (K-12), public, and special libraries from business, economic, library science, and educational perspectives. Analyzes how these perspectives are linked within library practices. The course will include study of local libraries. The course will include field trips to local libraries.
Same as BUS 344, EDUC 344, LIB 344
GenEd: D, Interdisciplinary
ECON 347 THE UNIVERSITY (3)
Three hours lecture per week
A study of institutions of higher education from multiple perspectives including, but not limited to education, teaching and learning, scholarly and creative activities, community service, management, and public policy. The course will include case studies of colleges and universities in the region and may include field trips to these institutions.
Same as BUS 347, EDUC 347
GenEd: D, Interdisciplinary
ECON 349 HISTORY OF BUSINESS AND ECONOMICS IN NORTH AMERICA (3)
Three hours of lecture per week
Examines the growth and development of the economies of North America since colonial times. Addresses social, ethical, economic and management issues during the development of Canada, the United States, and Mexico. Analyzes the business principles underlying the growth and development of the economies.
Same as HIST 349, BUS 349
GenEd: D, Interdisciplinary
ECON 362 ENVIRONMENTAL ECONOMICS (3)
Three hours lecture per week
Prerequisite: ECON 110 and ECON111, or ECON 300
Economic analysis of environmental problems and policy. Market failures due to externalities, public goods, and common property resources are examined. Private (market) and public (government) solutions to environmental problems are examined.
ECON 370 THE WORLD ECONOMY (3)
Three hours lecture per week
Prerequisite: ECON 110 or ECON 300
Theory, practice, and institutions of the international economy. Topics include international trade and investment, balance of payments, foreign exchange rates, international institutions in the global economy, and international economic policy.
ECON 411 ECONOMICS OF ENTREPRENEURSHIP (3)
Three hours lecture per week
Prerequisite: ECON 110 and ECON 111
Application of economic concepts to entrepreneurial strategies and decisions. Analysis of entrepreneurial activities as related to production, markets, innovation, risk, and the macroeconomy.
ECON 415 INDUSTRIAL ORGANIZATION (3)
Three hours of lecture per week
Prerequisite: ECON 310 or ECON 329
A theoretical and empirical examination of the structure, conduct and performance of industries. Topics include market structures, games and strategy, and pricing strategy.
ECON 425 LABOR ECONOMICS (3)
Three hours of lecture per week
Prerequisite: ECON 310 or ECON 329
An examination of the employment of labor as a factor of production. Topics include employment, wage rates, unions and collective bargaining, and labor legislation.
ECON 444 VALUES AND VALUABLES (3)
Three hours lecture per week
Prerequisite: ANTH 102 or ECON 110
Examination of the intimate linkages between the creation of cultural values and the perception of economic value through the analysis of production and exchange in various cultural contexts. Synthesis of the debates in the field of economic anthropology and application to pre-historic, modern, Western and non-Western societies.
Same as ANTH 444
GenEd: D, Interdisciplinary
ECON 448 GLOBALIZATION AND DEVELOPMENT (3)
Three hours lecture per week
Prerequisite: SOC 100
Examines empirical and theoretical issues of globalization from a sociological perspective, to understanding how the forces of globalization affect economic, political and cultural systems of both developed and developing nations.
Same as SOC 448, BUS 448
GenEd: D, Interdisciplinary
ECON 450 PUBLIC SECTOR ECONOMICS (3)
Three hours of lecture per week
Prerequisite: ECON 310 or ECON 329
The economic role of government with an emphasis on the allocation and distribution effects of government expenditures and taxation.
ECON 455 URBAN AND REGIONAL ECONOMICS (3)
Three hours of lecture per week
Prerequisite: ECON 310 or ECON 329
Economic analysis of urban and regional problems including the formation of cities, urban finance and services, growth, land use, transportation, income distribution, pollution, congestion, and law enforcement.
ECON 464 NATURAL RESOURCE ECONOMICS (3)
Three hours lecture per week
Prerequisite: ECON 310 or ECON 329
Microeconomics and capital theory applied to problems of conserving and managing natural resources. Analysis of public policies affecting renewable and nonrenewable resources including price controls, taxation and leasing. Representative topics include: forestry, fishery, energy, water and mineral economics.
ECON 471 INTERNATIONAL TRADE (3)
Three hours lecture per week
Prerequisite: ECON 310 or ECON 329
The theory of international trade, effects of tariff and non-tariff barriers, and conduct of commercial policy. Topics include theories of comparative advantage, gains from trade, distribution effects of trade, international factor movements and trade restrictions, the political economy of trade and industrial policy.
ECON 472 INTERNATIONAL MACROECONOMICS (3)
Three hours lecture per week
Prerequisite: ECON 311 or ECON 320
Macroeconomic analysis of the open economy, the impact of stabilization policies in a global economy, the role of the balance of payments, and the international monetary system. Topics include balance of payments accounts, spot-forward exchange rates, interest rate arbitrage, purchasing-power parity, exchange rate determination and macroeconomic policy in an open economy.
ECON 473 DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS (3)
Three hours lecture per week
Prerequisite: ECON 310 or ECON 329
Economic underdevelopment and its causes from historical, institutional and structural perspectives. Theories and patterns of growth and development, and the role of government, trade, education. Regional focus may vary by semester.
ECON 480 TOPICS IN ENVIRONMENTAL AND NATURAL RESOURCE ECONOMICS (3)
Three hours lecture per week
Prerequisite: ECON 362 or ECON 464 or Consent of Instructor
Application of economic analysis to topics in environmental and natural resource economics. Representative topics include: energy problems and policies, the measurement of market and non-market benefits and costs, endangered species management. Repeatable by topic.
ECON 486 INTRODUCTION TO ECONOMETRICS (3)
Three hours lecture per week
Prerequisite: ECON 310 or ECON 329, ECON 311 and MATH 340
Application of mathematical and statistical methods to economic data. Estimation of economic relationships using regression analysis, hypothesis testing, and forecasting.
ECON 488 APPLIED MANAGERIAL ECONOMETRICS (4)
Three hours lecture and two hour lab per week
Prerequisite: MATH/PSY 202 or MATH 329 or 352, ECON 310 or ECON 329 and MATH 150
Emphasis on the collection and manipulation of economic data, and the application of econometric methods to business and resource management issues. Development of testable hypotheses, applications of estimation techniques and interpretation of regression results. Use of econometric software applications to estimate statistical relations.
ECON 490 SPECIAL TOPICS (3)
Three hours per week
Prerequisite: Consent of the Instructor
In-depth analysis of current topics in economics. Topics vary each semester. Repeatable by topic.
ECON 492 SERVICE LEARNING/INTERNSHIP (3)
Six hours per week
Prerequisite: Consent of Instructor
Individual internship through service learning.
Graded Credit/No Credit
ECON 493 SERVICE LEARNING AT THE ZOO (1-3)
One to three hours activity per week
Prerequisite: BIOL/BUS/ECON/EDUC 342 and Consent of Instructor
Working with a local zoo, individuals or teams of students will engage in service learning projects. Students will apply skills and competencies acquired in their academic programs to issues and challenges facing modern zoos.
Student Option: Graded or CR/NC
Same as UNIV 493, BIOL 493, BUS 493, EDUC 493
ECON 497 DIRECTED STUDY (1-3)
Variable hours per week
Prerequisite: Consent of Instructor
Individual contracted study on topics or research selected by the student and faculty mentor. Repeatable for up to nine units.
Graded Credit/No Credit
ECON 499 CAPSTONE (3)
Three hours of lecture per week
Prerequisite: ECON 310, ECON 311 and ECON 488 and Senior Standing
In-depth analysis of an economic issue utilizing the theoretical and empirical tools developed in the required major courses. Culminates with a senior paper and a formal presentation.