Georgia Institute of Technology School of Economics

Similar documents
ECO 2013-Principles of Macroeconomics

DEPARTMENT OF FINANCE AND ECONOMICS

Principles Of Macroeconomics Case Fair Oster 10e

Livermore Valley Joint Unified School District. B or better in Algebra I, or consent of instructor

Firms and Markets Saturdays Summer I 2014

TUESDAYS/THURSDAYS, NOV. 11, 2014-FEB. 12, 2015 x COURSE NUMBER 6520 (1)

Alabama A&M University School of Business Department of Economics, Finance & Office Systems Management Normal, AL Fall 2004

PROVIDENCE UNIVERSITY COLLEGE

BUS Computer Concepts and Applications for Business Fall 2012

ACCT 100 Introduction to Accounting Course Syllabus Course # on T Th 12:30 1:45 Spring, 2016: Debra L. Schmidt-Johnson, CPA

Economics 201 Principles of Microeconomics Fall 2010 MWF 10:00 10:50am 160 Bryan Building

*In Ancient Greek: *In English: micro = small macro = large economia = management of the household or family

ECO 210. Macroeconomics

ECO 2013: PRINCIPLES OF MACROECONOMICS Spring 2017

University of Waterloo Department of Economics Economics 102 (Section 006) Introduction to Macroeconomics Winter 2012

Financial Accounting Concepts and Research

PROGRAMME SYLLABUS International Management, Bachelor programme, 180

BUSINESS FINANCE 4265 Financial Institutions

Economics 100: Introduction to Macroeconomics Spring 2012, Tuesdays and Thursdays Kenyon 134

THE GEORGE WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY Department of Economics. ECON 1012: PRINCIPLES OF MACROECONOMICS Prof. Irene R. Foster

Leveraging MOOCs to bring entrepreneurship and innovation to everyone on campus

SYLLABUS. EC 322 Intermediate Macroeconomics Fall 2012

Microeconomics And Behavior

ECON492 Senior Capstone Seminar: Cost-Benefit and Local Economic Policy Analysis Fall 2017 Instructor: Dr. Anita Alves Pena

Professor Christina Romer. LECTURE 24 INFLATION AND THE RETURN OF OUTPUT TO POTENTIAL April 20, 2017

University of Waterloo School of Accountancy. AFM 102: Introductory Management Accounting. Fall Term 2004: Section 4

JN2000: Introduction to Journalism Syllabus Fall 2016 Tuesdays and Thursdays 12:30 1:45 p.m., Arrupe Hall 222

COMM370, Social Media Advertising Fall 2017

CHEM:1070 Sections A, B, and C General Chemistry I (Fall 2017)

CIS Introduction to Digital Forensics 12:30pm--1:50pm, Tuesday/Thursday, SERC 206, Fall 2015

English Policy Statement and Syllabus Fall 2017 MW 10:00 12:00 TT 12:15 1:00 F 9:00 11:00

ECO 210. Macroeconomics

SOUTHERN MAINE COMMUNITY COLLEGE South Portland, Maine 04106

Like much of the country, Detroit suffered significant job losses during the Great Recession.

BUSINESS FINANCE 4239 Risk Management

School of Economics & Business.

Required Texts: Intermediate Accounting by Spiceland, Sepe and Nelson, 8E Course notes are available on UNM Learn.

International Business Principles (MKT 3400)

PBHL HEALTH ECONOMICS I COURSE SYLLABUS Winter Quarter Fridays, 11:00 am - 1:50 pm Pearlstein 308

FINANCIAL STRATEGIES. Employee Hand Book

Jeffrey Church and Roger Ware, Industrial Organization: A Strategic Approach, edition 1. It is available for free in PDF format.

Intermediate Computable General Equilibrium (CGE) Modelling: Online Single Country Course

Pitching Accounts & Advertising Sales ADV /PR

Course Syllabus. Course Information Course Number/Section OB 6301-MBP

Please read this entire syllabus, keep it as reference and is subject to change by the instructor.

2017 FALL PROFESSIONAL TRAINING CALENDAR

Managerial Economics 12th Edition Answers

MKT ADVERTISING. Fall 2016

5.7 Course Descriptions

ECON 442: Economic Development Course Syllabus Second Semester 2009/2010

EDIT 576 (2 credits) Mobile Learning and Applications Fall Semester 2015 August 31 October 18, 2015 Fully Online Course

UEP 251: Economics for Planning and Policy Analysis Spring 2015

Instructor Experience and Qualifications Professor of Business at NDNU; Over twenty-five years of experience in teaching undergraduate students.

University of Florida ADV 3502, Section 1B21 Advertising Sales Fall 2017

POLITICAL SCIENCE 315 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS

Trends in College Pricing

MGT/MGP/MGB 261: Investment Analysis

Answers To Managerial Economics And Business Strategy

Connect Microbiology. Training Guide

AS SYLLABUS. 2 nd Year Arabic COURSE DESCRIPTION

Newcastle University Business School (NUBS)

CALCULUS I Math mclauh/classes/calculusi/ SYLLABUS Fall, 2003

Office Hours: Day Time Location TR 12:00pm - 2:00pm Main Campus Carl DeSantis Building 5136

Bachelor of Science in Banking & Finance: Accounting Specialization

Business 712 Managerial Negotiations Fall 2011 Course Outline. Human Resources and Management Area DeGroote School of Business McMaster University

The Federal Reserve Bank of New York

International Business BADM 455, Section 2 Spring 2008

PHILOSOPHY & CULTURE Syllabus

Connect Mcgraw Hill Managerial Accounting Promo Code

Penn State University - University Park MATH 140 Instructor Syllabus, Calculus with Analytic Geometry I Fall 2010

TOPICS IN PUBLIC FINANCE

Management 4219 Strategic Management

Design and Creation of Games GAME

Course Content Concepts

BUSI 2504 Business Finance I Spring 2014, Section A

International Environmental Policy Spring :374:315:01 Tuesdays, 10:55 am to 1:55 pm, Blake 131

Strategic Management (MBA 800-AE) Fall 2010

Food Products Marketing

Class Schedule

Mcgraw Hill Financial Accounting Connect Promo Code

SORRELL COLLEGE OF BUSINESS

Spring 2015 CRN: Department: English CONTACT INFORMATION: REQUIRED TEXT:

Marketing Management MBA 706 Mondays 2:00-4:50

ACC 380K.4 Course Syllabus

Georgia Tech College of Management Project Management Leadership Program Eight Day Certificate Program: October 8-11 and November 12-15, 2007

Economics at UCD. Professor Karl Whelan Presentation at Open Evening January 17, 2017

Social Media Marketing BUS COURSE OUTLINE

CMST 2060 Public Speaking

EECS 700: Computer Modeling, Simulation, and Visualization Fall 2014

ACC 362 Course Syllabus

Lucintel. Publisher Sample

Study Board Guidelines Western Kentucky University Department of Psychological Sciences and Department of Psychology

Beginning and Intermediate Algebra, by Elayn Martin-Gay, Second Custom Edition for Los Angeles Mission College. ISBN 13:

CHMB16H3 TECHNIQUES IN ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY

EDIT 576 DL1 (2 credits) Mobile Learning and Applications Fall Semester 2014 August 25 October 12, 2014 Fully Online Course

Hist 1210, World History 1 Fall 2014

SPM 5309: SPORT MARKETING Fall 2017 (SEC. 8695; 3 credits)

Ryerson University Sociology SOC 483: Advanced Research and Statistics

MGMT3274 INTERNATONAL BUSINESS PROCESSES AND PROBLEMS

SHARIF F. KHAN. June 16, 2015

Transcription:

Georgia Institute of Technology School of Economics 1 Fall 2016 ECON 2100 ECONOMICS AND POLICY TTh 1:35-2:55 Howey L1 Instructor: Office: E-mail: Office Hours: Professor Christine Ries Old Civil Engineering (CE) building at 221 Bobby Dodd Way Christine.ries@econ.gatech.edu Virtual Office Hours with Graduate Teaching Assistants: to be announced Instructor: By appointment. Generally available immediately after class. Required Materials: Gregory Mankiw, Essentials of Economics, 7 th ed. Cengage Learning. Cengage Mindtap and Aplia for reading and quizzes Course Overview Available at bookstores, online and hard copy editions of text. See Appendix for information on ordering and registering materials directly with Cengage. This course provides an overview of the principles of economic analysis. We will cover microeconomics the study of "small" economic agents such as individuals and firms; and macroeconomics - the behavior of large aggregate measures of the whole economy. Economics is the study of behavior, especially of people s choices. But, we don t study an individual s choices in isolation. When one person s choices affect another person, and that person s response feeds back to the first person, we experience a change in the economy. In other words, the economy is a complex, dynamic, adaptive system of many interacting individuals. You will learn to use the concepts of economic analysis to understand and predict individual choices and their impacts on other people and on the economy. But the end of the term, you will be able to apply an economics lens to your observations of events and choices in the world and better understand these actions and choices. You will also learn to predict when one set of events will have a trigger effect on another set of events. In order to learn and be able to use these concepts in a dynamic and changing environment, we will use state-of-the-art educational technology and pedagogy the will move your learning at least through the application level and generally into the analysis level of Bloom s taxonomy. (See appendix). The course is designed as an introduction to the field for non-majors. Learning Goals Learning Goals will guide our work in each class. We will complete the learning objectives recommended for undergraduate economics education as shown in the syllabus appendix. For each Learning Goal you be required to demonstrate the ability to describe the social, political, and economic forces that influence social behavior. You will also be asked to demonstrate the ability to analyze economic phenomenon with clarity, accuracy, precision, relevance, depth, breadth, and logic. You will learn to describe and demonstrate your mastery in classes that are designed according to Bloom s taxonomy (see Appendix). Bloom s Taxonomy is one good description of 21 st Century learning skills or the steps to

2 development of critical thinking skills. 1 And very persuasive new research on educational outcomes confirm that this model gives us the most effective and efficient way to learn. During your college experience you should advance through Bloom s levels of mastery in each of your courses and reach the top of the pyramid in your major and minor courses, at least. In this introductory economics class we will concentrate on mastery at the first three levels - remembering, understanding, application (using economic principles to analyze events and choices). We will work through each of these levels for each chapter with class preparation assignments, in-class mini-lectures and lablets (individual and team-based), and real time assessment. For each class session, we will focus on the assigned chapter s particular learning goals. (These are summarized at the beginning of each textbook chapter.) You will be exposed to the concepts and analysis in pre-class work byreading the assigned chapter and working the Aplia homework quizzes. (These are open-book but graded.) In-class lecturettes will highlight key issues and cover areas you found problematic on the Aplia quizzes. You will use individual lablets (quizzes) and team-discussion of challenging quiz questions. Additional learning resources include the questions from text, and extra problems included in Mindtap for each chapter. Check the tools at the side of Mindtap for additional resources. Finally, the Student Study Guide is excellent and may be purchased from Cengage. Study groups have proven over time to be exceptionally useful to students. Most students who have any trouble with the course have not gotten into a study group early, or at all. I am very committed to your learning and I love economics. Please feel free to come to me with questions, for more explanation, or just to discuss economic topics that interest you. I will leave time at or near the end of class for questions and you may contact me by email if you need a special appointment. (Generally will not respond to email requests outside of business hours, but always try to get back promptly.) Out-of-class assignments, lectures, in-class lablets, and exams For each class we will work with materials for the chapter assigned on that date. Prior to class, you should read and study the text chapter. Compete and submit the Aplia quizzes before 6 AM on the day of class. In class I will give several short lecturettes that put the material in context and cover the areas that you found problematic in Aplia homework. There will be several short, ungraded quizzes in each class and the opportunity to work in teams around the questions that are most challenging. The course is designed for you to self-assess your own progress and work until you have mastered the material. Some of you, especially those who have had economics before, may do this fairly quickly. Some of you will need more time and will work through more materials before you can remember, understand and apply the concepts. There are self- testing problems in Mindtap and the problems and questions at the end of the text and in Aplia are excellent. The Cengage Student Study Guide is also excellent. My goal is that each of you leave the class having demonstrated, by GREAT exam scores, that you have mastered and can use these essential principles of economics. There will be five exams, each covering the material in that module of the course (see appendix for dates and chapters). 1 Critical thinking is defined as systematically analyzing and questioning information in a manner that identifies and evaluates problems, processes, values, assumptions, and arguments in order to reach understanding, determine solutions, and initiate actions.

Student responsibilities and Grading 3 Final letter grades will be assigned based on your performance on Aplia quizzes, exams and short team projects held in class during the last two days of classes. Georgia Tech Honor Code: Please review the GT Honor Code. I will prosecute any violation to the fullest extent possible Students with Disabilities: I fully support the Students with Disabilities program at GT. Please bring the forms and paperwork to me after class and we will discuss requirement for your successful participation in the class. Aplia: No late submissions. No excuses. Twenty points are added at end of class in lieu of dropping two quiz scores. Use these for contingencies in your lives and schedules. Exams: No makeup exams.. (Student athletes will take makeup exams when excused for sports events.) In extreme extenuating circumstances advise me as soon as possible and document the incident with a letter from the Dean of Students of from the doctor. In that case, you will not take that exam, but will earn the average percentage of the other exams you have taken. Only one of these excused exam absences is allowed. Grading: Five exams 80% Aplia/homework quizzes 10% Final team projects 10% Above 90% Above 80% Above 70% and pass/fail Above 60% A B C D

4 Appendix: Ordering Materials, Schedule and Assignments; National Standards How to access your MindTap course Econ 2100 Fall 2016 Instructor : Prof. Ries Start Date : 08/22/2016 What is MindTap? MindTap empowers you to produce your best work consistently. MindTap is designed to help you master the material. Interactive videos, animations, and activities create a learning path designed by your instructor to guide you through the course and focus on what's important. Get started today! Registration 1. Connect to https://login.cengagebrain.com/course/mtppfc5p94ql 2. Follow the prompts to register your MindTap course. Payment After registering for your course, you will need to pay for access using one of the options below: Online: You can pay online using a credit or debit card, or PayPal. Bookstore: You may be able to purchase access to MindTap at your bookstore. Check with the bookstore to find out what they offer for your course. Free Trial: If you are unable to pay at the start of the semester you may choose to access MindTap until 11:59 PM on 09/12/2016 during your free trial. After the free trial ends you will be required to pay for access. Please note: At the end of the free trial period, your course access will be suspended until your payment has been made. All your scores and course activity will be saved and will be available to you after you pay for access. If you already registered an access code or bought MindTap online, the course key to register for this course is: MTPPFC5P94QL System Check To check whether your computer meets the requirements for using MindTap, go to http://ng.cengage.com/static/browsercheck/index.html Please Note: the System Check is also accessible in the drop down box next to your name located in the upper right corner of your MindTap page.

5.Bloom s Taxonomy Class Schedule and Reading Assignments Class Schedule Fall 2016 1 Aug 23 2 Aug 25 3 Aug 30 4 Sept 1 5 Sept 6 6 Sept 8 7 Sept 13 8 Sept 15 9 Sept 20 10 Sept 22 11 Sept 27 12 Sept 29 13 Oct 4 14 Oct 6 15 Oct 13 16 Oct 18 17 Oct 20 E2100 F16 Folder Part I: Introduction Folder Part II: How Markets Work Folder Part III: Markets and Welfare Folder Part IV: The Economics of the Public Sector Folder Part V: Firm Behavior and the Organization of Introduction Unit Chapter 1: Ten Principles of Economics Unit Chapter 2: Thinking Like an Economist Unit Chapter 3: Interdependence and the Gains from Trade Unit Chapter 4: The Market Forces of Supply and Demand Unit Chapter 5: Elasticity and Its Application Unit Chapter 6: Supply, Demand, and Government Policies EXAM 1 Unit Chapter 7: Consumers, Producers, and the Efficiency of Markets Unit Chapter 8: Application: The Costs of Taxation Unit Chapter 9: Application: International Trade EXAM 2 Unit Chapter 10: Externalities Unit Chapter 11: Public Goods and Common Resources REVIEW EXAM 3 Unit Chapter 12: The Costs of Production

Industry 6 18 Oct 25 19 Oct 27 20 Nov 1 21 Nov 3 22 Nov 8 23 Nov 10 24 Nov 15 25 Nov 17 26 Nov 22 27 Nov 29 28 Dec 1 29 Dec 6 30 Dec 8 Unit Chapter 13: Firms in Competitive Markets Unit Chapter 14: Monopoly EXAM 4 Chapter 15: Measuring a Nation's Income and Output Chapter 16: Measuring the Cost of Living Chapter 17: Production and Growth Chapter 20 Unemployment Chapter 21: the Monetary System Class Cancelled Chapter 22: Money Demand and Inflation EXAM 5 Reading Period and project Reading Period and project National Standards CONTENT STANDARDS STANDARD 1: SCARCITY. 2 Productive resources are limited. Therefore, people cannot have all the goods and services they want; as a result, they must choose some things and give up others. STANDARD 2: DECISION MAKING. 5 Effective decision making requires comparing the additional costs of alternatives with the additional benefits. Many choices involve doing a little more or a little less of something: few choices are all or nothing decisions. STANDARD 3: ALLOCATION. 8 Different methods can be used to allocate goods and services. People acting individually or collectively must choose which methods to use to allocate different kinds of goods and services. STANDARD 4: INCENTIVES. 10 People usually respond predictably to positive and negative incentives. STANDARD 5: TRADE. 13 Voluntary exchange occurs only when all participating parties expect to gain. This is true for trade among individuals or organizations within a nation, and among individuals or organizations in different nations. STANDARD 6: SPECIALIZATION. 15 When individuals, regions, and nations specialize in what they can produce at the lowest cost and then trade with others, both production and consumption increase. STANDARD 7: MARKETS AND PRICES. 17 A market exists when buyers and sellers interact. This interaction determines market prices and thereby allocates scarce goods and services. STANDARD 8: ROLE OF PRICES. 20 Prices send signals and provide incentives to buyers and sellers. When supply or demand changes, market prices adjust, affecting incentives. STANDARD 9: COMPETITION AND MARKET STRUCTURE. 22 Competition among sellers usually lowers costs and prices, and encourages producers to produce what consumers are willing and able to buy. Competition among buyers increases prices and allocates goods

and services to those people who are willing and able to pay the most for them. STANDARD 10: INSTITUTIONS. 24 Institutions evolve and are created to help individuals and groups accomplish their goals. Banks, labor unions, markets, corporations, legal systems, and not-for-profit organizations are examples of important institutions. A different kind of institution, clearly defined and enforced property rights, is essential to a market economy. iv Voluntary National Content Standards IN ECONO MICS STANDARD 11: MONEY AND INFLATION.. 26 Money makes it easier to trade, borrow, save, invest, and compare the value of goods and services. The amount of money in the economy affects the overall price level. Inflation is an increase in the overall price level that reduces the value of money. STANDARD 12: INTEREST RATES. 29 Interest rates, adjusted for inflation, rise and fall to balance the amount saved with the amount borrowed, which affects the allocation of scarce resources between present and future uses. STANDARD 13: INCOME. 31 Income for most people is determined by the market value of the productive resources they sell. What workers earn primarily depends on the market value of what they produce. STANDARD 14: ENTREPRENEURSHIP. 33 Entrepreneurs take on the calculated risk of starting new businesses, either by embarking on new ventures similar to existing ones or by introducing new innovations. Entrepreneurial innovation is an important source of economic growth. STANDARD 15: ECONOMIC GROWTH. 35 Investment in factories, machinery, new technology, and in the health, education, and training of people stimulates economic growth and can raise future standards of living. STANDARD 16: ROLE OF GOVERNMENT AND MARKET FAILURE. 38 There is an economic role for government in a market economy whenever the benefits of a government policy outweigh its costs. Governments often provide for national defense, address environmental concerns, define and protect property rights, and attempt to make markets more competitive. Most government policies also have direct or indirect effects on peoples incomes. STANDARD 17: GOVERNMENT FAILURE. 41 Costs of government policies sometimes exceed benefits. This may occur because of incentives facing voters, government officials, and government employees, because of actions by special interest groups that can impose costs on the general public, or because social goals other than economic efficiency are being pursued. STANDARD 18: ECONOMIC FLUCTUATIONS. 43 Fluctuations in a nation s overall levels of income, employment, and prices are determined by the interaction of spending and production decisions made by all households, firms, government agencies, and others in the economy. Recessions occur when overall levels of income and employment decline. STANDARD 19: UNEMPLOYMENT AND INFLATION. 45 Unemployment imposes costs on individuals and the overall economy. Inflation, both expected and unexpected, also imposes costs on individuals and the overall economy. Unemployment increases during recessions and decreases during recoveries. STANDARD 20: FISCAL AND MONETARY POLICY. 47 Federal government budgetary policy and the Federal Reserve System s monetary policy influence the overall levels of employment, output, and prices. 7