Courses

ECON-8423 (3) Seminar: International Finance

Highlights foreign exchange markets, past and current international monetary mechanisms, and processes of adjustment. Examines the role of international financial markets for the behavior of consumption, investment, saving, and production. Also considers international transmission of business cycles. Prereq., ECON 6423 or 7020.

ECON-8433 (3) Seminar: Topics in Money and International Economics

Explores advanced work in various aspects of international economics, such as empirical trade analysis, public choice, and interactions between real and monetary phenomena in the world economy. Prereq., ECON 6413, 6423, 8413, or 8423. Prerequisites: Restricted to Graduate Students only.

ECON-8534 (3) Economic History of North America

Examines North America's past from the perspective of economics. Topics include growth and welfare in the colonial period; staple products, agricultural development, and the emerging industrialism in the antebellum period; transformation of the North American economy to 1914; the interwar years and the Great Depression; and economic integration since 1945. Prereqs., ECON 6070 and 6080, or ECON 7010.

ECON-8535 (3) Environmental Economics I

Considers the allocation of society's scarce environmental resources and government attempts to achieve more efficient and equitable allocations. It is a course in applied welfare economics with an emphasis on market failure and valuation. Prereq., ECON 6535 and 6808; or ECON 7010. Prerequisites: Restricted to Graduate Students only.

ECON-8545 (3) Environmental Economics II

Provides advanced study of recent advances in environmental economics and explores opportunities for new research. Topics vary with interests of instructor and students. Prereqs., ECON 6535 and 6808, or ECON 7010 and ECON 8535. Prerequisites: Restricted to Graduate Students only.

ECON-8555 (3) Water Resources Development and Management

Offers a research seminar in joint hydrologic-economic modeling and systems analysis. Addresses problems of joint water quantity-water quality management and joint surface-ground water management. Prereq., ECON 6555.

APPM-8600 (1) Seminar in Computational Mathematics

Introduces advanced topics and research in computational mathematics. Prereq., instructor consent. Prerequisites: Restricted to Graduate Students only.

ECON-8666 (1-3) Economic Demography

Investigates economic determinants and consequences of demographic behavior in developing and developed countries. Issues include fertility and female labor supply interactions, the demographic transition, the effect of population growth on income distribution, family investments in children, and intergenerational mobility. Prereqs., ECON 3070 and 3080.

ECON-8676 (3) Seminar: Labor Economics 1

Focuses on the demand side of labor markets. Topics include standard static and dynamic models of labor demand, labor market discrimination, composition of compensation, labor hierarchies within enterprises, unionization, efficient contracts, and macroeconomics of labor markets. Prereq., ECON 6070 or 7010.

ECON-8686 (3) Seminar: Labor Economics 2

Focuses on special topics in labor economics: dynamic theories of labor supply, employment, and unemployment; labor supply in a household framework; and labor market activity and income distribution. Explores both theoretical models and empirical tests in each area. Prereq., ECON 6070 or 7010. Prerequisites: Restricted to Graduate Students only.

ECON-8747 (3) Industrial Organization Theory

Highlights economics of regulation of industry and markets, industry studies, and the application of lab methods to industrial organization. Prereq., ECON 7010. Prerequisites: Restricted to Graduate Students only.

ECON-8757 (3) Industrial Organization and Public Policy

Addresses the theory of interaction of firms within markets and industries, emphasizing importance of the number, relative size of firms, market institution,firm strategies, and nature of consumer demand. Examines neoclassical and game theoretic models, empirical industry studies, and laboratory tests of theoretical models and policies. Prereq., ECON 7010. Prerequisites: Restricted to Graduate Students only.

ECON-8764 (3) History of Economic Development

Covers in historical perspective the causes of economic development including why some areas develop faster than others and why development occurs more rapidly in some eras than others. Prereqs., ECON 6070 and 6080, or ECON 7010. Same as HIST 7214. Prerequisites: Restricted to Graduate Students only.

ECON-8774 (3) Seminar in Transition Economies

Focuses on the problems encountered in countries evolving from planned to market economies. Emphasizes applications of new and traditional models of economic growth and analysis of problems unique to formerly planned economies. Prereq., ECON 6774 or 7010.

ECON-8784 (3) Economic Development

Explores empirical, theoretical, and policy issues in economic development. Examines political economy, income distribution and poverty, demographic change, labor force employment and migration, human capital, physical capital, natural resources and the environment, industrial structure, international trade and finance, stabilization policy, and structural adjustment. Prereqs., ECON 6774 or 7010. Prerequisites: Restricted to Graduate Students only.

MATH-8815 (1-3) Ulam Seminar

May be repeated up to 3 total credit hours. Prerequisites: Restricted to Graduate Students only.

ECON-8828 (3) Seminar: Econometrics 1

First semester of two-semester sequence in econometrics for PhD students. Studies least squares and generalized least squares estimation of linear econometric models. Asymptotic (large sample) theory of inference. Some topics in the estimation of microdata. Prereq., ECON 7818. Prerequisites: Restricted to Graduate Students only.

ECON-8838 (3) Seminar: Econometrics 2

Teaches the advanced level of econometrics theory. Topics include asymptotic theory, maximum likelihood estimation, limited dependent variables analysis and other frontier areas of econometrics such as the method of moment estimation, semiparametric and nonparametric estimation procedure. Prereq., ECON 7828.

EBIO-8840 (1-6) Independent Research (Doctoral Level)

May be repeated up to 6 total credit hours. Prerequisites: Restricted to Graduate Students only.

SPAN-8840 (1-3) Independent Study

May be repeated up to 7 total credit hours. Prereq., graduate standing in Spanish or departmental approval.

ECON-8848 (3) Applied Microeconometrics

Presents a "User's guide" to conducting empirical research in applied microeconomics. Begins with a primer on an industry-standard econometric software package including programming techniques and data management. Introduces advanced econometric techniques including panel data methods, IV, matching models, regression discontinuity, and limited dependent variables models. Concludes with a research project requiring a replication and/or extension of an existing published paper. Prereqs., ECON 7818 and 7828. Prerequisites: Restricted to Graduate Students only.

ECON-8858 (3) Computational and Structural Estimation Methods

Teaches students to construct a variety of applied economic models, obtain parameter values through calibration or estimation techniques, and uses the resulting models to conduct policy simulations. Prereqs., ECON 7010 and 7818. Prerequisites: Restricted to Graduate Students only.

MATH-8900 (1-3) Independent Study

Undergraduates must have approval of the instructor. May be repeated up to 6 total credit hours.

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