Courses

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  • CAS EC 541: Topics in Monetary Theory and Macroeconomics
    Combines monetary economics, macroeconomics, and finance. Focus on the interactions among money, interest rate, and consumption and on their consequences for monetary policy and asset prices (bonds, stocks, and currencies).
  • CAS EC 542: Money and Financial Intermediation
    The role of money and financial institutions in the economy. The money supply process, models of money demand, financial markets, interest rates and asset prices, and the transmission of monetary policy. Financial intermediary management and regulation; derivatives and risk management.
  • CAS EC 545: Financial Economics
    Provides a sound understanding of the economic principles of finance, including the financial decisions and capital structure of a corporation, and its relation to capital markets. Models of capital asset pricing and investors' behavior are also discussed.
  • CAS EC 551: Economics of Labor Markets
    Economic behavior of labor markets and labor market institutions in the United States. Wage determination, labor allocation, discrimination, economics of trade unions, and industrial relations. Implications of labor market behaviors for public policy.
  • CAS EC 552: Economic Organization and Labor Markets
    Examines the role of market failures, economic power, and public policy in determining wages, human capital investments, and labor productivity. Neoclassical, new institutional, and organizational theories for analyzing the economics of labor markets are contrasted and evaluated using both quantitative and case study evidence.
  • CAS EC 561: Public Economics I
    Applies microeconomic theory to public-policy decisions worldwide, using a methodology of applied welfare economics or cost-benefit analysis. Applications are to project evaluation, taxation, regulation, shadow pricing, privatization, policy impact analysis, and valuation of external effects such as pollution and congestion.
  • CAS EC 565: Economic Institutions in Historical Perspective
    Historical development and role of institutions underlying market economies. Topics include contract enforcement and trading institutions, financial institutions, property rights in land, environmental resources such as water management and fisheries, economic infrastructure, regulation of labor, and capital markets.
  • CAS EC 569: African American Economic History
    Introduction to current research in African American economic history. Topics include slavery and its aftermath, the long-term evolution of racial economic differences, segregation, voting rights, and anti-discrimination legislation. Also offered as CAS AA 569.
  • CAS EC 571: Energy and Environmental Economics
    Environmental resources and markets characterized from physical, economic, and legal standpoints. Welfare arguments for public sector intervention. Methodologies for policy assessment and simulation analyzed, including project analysis, new technology, evaluation models, deterministic and econometric models.
  • CAS EC 572: Public Control of Business
    Examines economic theory and case studies of antitrust policy, government regulation of private industry and operation of state owned enterprises. Case studies are drawn from both industrialized and developing countries.
  • CAS EC 581: Health Economics I
    Demand for insurance and health care, moral hazard, and adverse selection. Supply of health care, quality and price competition. Physician agency, payment systems, capitation, risk management, and managed care. Emphasis on U.S. institutions, although concepts are relevant to other countries.
  • CAS EC 591: International Economics
    Theory of international trade; empirical evidence from both industrialized and developing economies. The factor content of trade, technology and trade patterns, scale economies and imperfect competition, elements of economic geography. Policy interventions: tariffs, the exchange rate, trading blocs, and political economy of reform.
  • CAS EC 595: International Finance
    Applies economic tools to open-economy macroeconomics. Topics include the determinants of the current account, exchange rate management, international capital markets, and growth in the world economy. Topical issues: the formation of the Euro; debt and financial crisis in developing countries.
  • CAS EI 305: Manuscripts at Mugar
    Manuscripts, letters, rare books - literature, history, film, etc.- inspire our Howard Gotlieb Archival Research Center. M'scripts@mugar explores these for understanding and enjoyment. At Gotlieb and the Editorial Institute, undergraduates have their hands on originals, on editing, and on individual interests.
  • CAS EI 491: Directed Study
  • CAS EI 492: Directed Study
  • CAS EI 501: The Theory and Practice of Literary Editing
    An introduction to the theory, practice, and principles of editorial decisions, such as questions of modernization, revision, and annotation. Featuring a dozen visiting speakers and attending to notable editorial achievements.
  • CAS EI 503: Textual Scholarship
    Fundamentals of textual scholarship: bibliography, paleography, typography, textual criticism, and annotation.
  • CAS EI 506: Topics in Textual Scholarship and the History of Western Society
    Topics vary by semester.
  • CAS EI 507: Editing and Publishing
    Publishing procedures. The history, principles, theory and practices of book publication, focusing on scholarly and serious trade monographs and text books. Students acquire skills in proposals and contracts, copyediting, design, copyright and permissions, production, marketing, dissemination and reviews. Workshop setting.

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