Download second start 10 weeks

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Production for use wikipedia , lookup

Economic planning wikipedia , lookup

Edmund Phelps wikipedia , lookup

Economic democracy wikipedia , lookup

Steady-state economy wikipedia , lookup

Ragnar Nurkse's balanced growth theory wikipedia , lookup

Circular economy wikipedia , lookup

American School (economics) wikipedia , lookup

Economics of fascism wikipedia , lookup

Fiscal multiplier wikipedia , lookup

Non-monetary economy wikipedia , lookup

Post–World War II economic expansion wikipedia , lookup

Keynesian economics wikipedia , lookup

Business cycle wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
SYLLABUS FOR MACROECONOMICS 2301
HCCS SOUTHWEST COLLEGE
SPRING 2011 – SECOND START 10 WEEKS
INSTRUCTOR: R. B. WAGNER
CAMPUS: / WLOP
B.S. MACALESTER COLLEGE
M.B.A. INDIANA UNIVERSITY
E-mail:[email protected]
TEXT AND MTLS:
THE ECONOMY TODAY, BRADLEY R. SCHILLER 12TH ED.,
MC GRAW – HILL IRWIN PUBLISHING, 2010. WEBSITE allows access to
specific content and real- world applications @
www.mhhe.com/schiller12e.
OBJECTIVES OF THE COURSE:

PROVIDE A WORKING KNOWLEDGE OF THE AMERICAN ECONOMY
AS IT RELATES TO SOCIAL AND INDIVIDUAL WELFARE.

GAIN AN UNDERSTANDING OF BASIC ECONOMIC CONCEPTS AND
THEORIES AND HOW THEY EFFECT DOMESTIC AND
INTERNATIONAL MARKETS.

LEARN THE RELATIONSHIP OF MONETARY AND FISCAL POLICY
CONCEPTS AS TOOLS FOR SOLVING ECONOMIC PROBLEMS IN
TODAYS WORLD.

DEVELOP THE ABILITY TO INTEGRATE ECONOMIC CONCEPTS
WITH THOSE OF OTHER SOCIAL SCIENCES IN ORDER TO
ANALYZE AND SOLVE PROBLEMS RELATED TO BUSINESS,
GOVERNMENT AND THE INDIVIDUAL.

GAIN EXPERIENCE IN SPEAKING BEFORE OTHERS THROUGH
CLASS PROJECTS AND DISCUSSONS.

DEVELOP BASIC COMPUTER SKILLS THROUGH INTERNET
ASSIGNMENTS AND PROJECTS.

UTILIZE WRITING AND MATH SKILLS THROUGH WRITTEN
ASSIGNMENTS, AND QUANTITATIVE PROBLEM SOLVING.
STUDENT REQUIREMENTS:

COMMITTMENT TO ATTEND CLASS.

TAKE NOTES AND PARTICIPATE IN DISCUSSIONS.

COMPLETE READING ASSIGNMENTS PRIOR TO CLASS.

COMPLETE ALL ASSIGNED WORK ON TIME.

REVIEW LECTURE NOTES AFTER EACH CLASS.

READ A DAILY PAPER.

ASK QUESTIONS AND KEEP CURRENT ON ECONOMIC NEWS.

PERFORM AT A COLLEGE SOPHMORE ACADEMIC LEVEL

CONDUCT YOURSELF ACCORDING TO COLLEGE POLICY.
GRADING BASIS:
THREE TEST GRADES WILL COUNT TOWARD 50% OF YOUR FINAL
GRADE. CLASS PROJECTS 15%, PARTICIPATION 10%, FINAL EXAM
WILL REPRESENT 25% OF YOUR FINAL GRADE.
NO EXTRA CREDIT WILL BE AVAILABLE
GRADE BASIS -
A=90-100%
B=80-89
C=70-79
D=60-69
F=<60
CLASS SCHEDULE:
CRN 64502 TR 1:00 – 3:00 PM 172B WLOP
POLICIES:
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
UNEXCUSED ABSENCES IN EXCESS OF NINE HOURS WILL
RESULT IN A “W” AS A FINAL GRADE.
LATE ASSIGNMENTS WILL NOT BE ACCEPTED.
NO MAKE-UP EXAMS WILL BE GIVEN WITHOUT AN
EXCUSE ACCEPTABLE TO THE INSTRUCTOR.
ALLOWED MAKE-UPS WILL BE ADMINISTERED AT THE TIME
SET BY YOUR INSTRUCTOR.
STUDENTS ARE RESPONSIBLE FOR DROPPING THE COURSE BY
COMPLETING ALL NECESSARY PAPER WORK, FAILURE TO DO
SO MAY RESULT IN AN “F”.
COUNSELING AND TUTORIALS ARE AVAILABLE PLEASE SEE
ME TO MAKE ARRANGEMENTS.
INCOMPLETES WILL BE GIVEN ONLY WHEN TWELVE WEEKS OF
COURSE WORK HAVE BEEN SUCCESSFULLY COMPLETED AND
PROOF OF ILLNESS OR INJURY THAT PREVENTS COURSE
COMPLETION IS ACCEPTED BY THE INSTRUCTOR.
SPECIAL CONDITIONS OR DISABILITIES THAT REQUIRE
ACCOMMODATION FOR THE STUDENT SHOULD BE CALLED TO
MY ATTENTION THE FIRST DAY OF CLASS SO THAT
ARRANGEMENTS CAN BE MADE AS PROMPTLY AS POSSIBLE.
CHEATING ON EXAMS AND OR PLAGIARISM WILL RESULT IN
EXPULSION AND A GRADE OF "F" IN THE CLASS.
CELL PHONES OR PDA’S MAY NOT BE USED IN THE CLASS ROOM.
THIS INCLUDES USING THE CELL PHONE AS A CALCULATOR.
OUTSIDE READING AND OTHER RESOURCE SUGGESTIONS:
THE HOUSTON CHRONICLE , THE WALL STREET JOURNAL, BARRONS,
FORBES, FORTUNE, FEDERAL RESERVE BULLETIN, SURVEY OF
CURRENT BUSINESS, THE ECONOMIST, TIME, NEWSWEEK.
COMPUTER SOFTWARE INCLUDING THE INTERNETS TUTORIAL BY
MCGRAW-HILL PUBLISHING. SHOULD BE USED TO SUPPLEMENT THE
TEXT AND LECTURES.
CALENDAR
SECOND START 10 WEEKS
MACROECONOMICS
SPRING 2011
WEEK 1 –BASICS OF THE COURSE INCLUDING INTRODUCTIONS
THE NATURE AND METHODS OF ECONOMICS
DEFINITIONS
WHY STUDY ECONOMICS?
GREAT ECONOMISTS
THEORY/POLICY
GOALS - COMPLEMENTARY/CONFLICTING
PITFALLS
PERSPECTIVES-SCARCITY/MARGINALITY
GRAPHS, THE LANGUAGE OF ECONOMICS
CHAPT. 1, 1A HOMEWORK ASSGMT. 1
THE ECONOMIZING PROBLEM- HOW DO WE DEAL WITH SCARCITY?
THE U.S. ECONOMY A GLOBAL VIEW.
SCARCITY VS. UNLIMITED WANTS
RESOURCES
EFFICIENCY- ALLOCATIVE/PRODUCTIVE
PRODUCTION POSSIBILITY CONCEPT
UNEMPLOYMENT, ECONOMIC GROWTH
THREE ECONOMIC SYSTEMS
HOW THEY ANSWER ECONOMIC QUESTIONS
CIRCULAR FLOW MODEL
CHPT. 2 HOMEWORK ASSGMT. 2
WEEK 2--THE MARKET SYSTEM- FUNCTIONS 0F RATIONING AND
ALLOCATING.
DEFINITIONS AND ASSUMPTIONS
LAW OF DEMAND
LAW OF SUPPLY
CHANGE IN Qd/Qs
CHANGES IN DEMAND OR SUPPLY
DETERMINANTS OF D/S
WEEK 3
COMPETITION, SPECIALIZATION, THE THREE BASIC ECONOMIC
QUESTIONS. THE MARKET STRIKES BACK, LEGAL PRICES AND TAXES.
CHPTS. 3, 4
THE BIG PICTURE, LEGAL FORMS OF BUSINESS
THE ROLE OF GOVT. IN THE ECONOMY. TEST 1
WEEK 4--MEASURING THE ECONOMY GDP TO PERSONAL INCOME .
INCOME AND EXPENDITURES APPROACH, ADJUSTING FOR PRICE
DIFFERENCES. THE CIRCULAR FLOW CONCEPT.
THE REAL SHORTCOMINGS OF NATIONAL INCOME ACCOUNTING.
CHAPT 5.
UNEMPLOYMENT DEFINING AND CALCULATING. HOW GOOD ARE THE
NUMBERS? OKUN’S LAW, THE IMPACT ON THE ECONOMY.
LOOKING AT CAUSES AND POLICY ISSUES. INFLATION, COST/PUSH
AND DEMAND /PULL, RATCHET EFFECT. CHAPTS. 6&7.
WEEK 5—BUSINESS CYCLES THEORIES AND
BUILDING THE AGGREGATE DEMAND MODEL.
DETERMINANTS OF CONSUMPTION AND INVESTMENT.
CONSUMPTION FUNCTION AND SAVINGS.
CHAPTS. 8&9.
AGGREGATE SUPPLY AND DEMAND,THE NATIONAL INCOME MODEL
CONSTRUCT.
CHAPT INVESTMENT SPENDING-PLANNED/UNPLANNED
C+I=Y=GDPe
EQUILIBRIUM NATIONAL INCOME
MULTIPLIER THEORY
RECESSIONARY GAPS / INFLATIONARY GAPS
FULL EMPLOYMENT, NON-INFLATIONARY GDP
FISCAL POLICY-FILLING THE GAPS
THE AD / AS MODEL- RATIONALE
DETERMINANTS OF AD /AS CHAPT 10, 11.
TEST 2
WEEK 6- DISCRETIONARY VS. CYCLICAL
EXPANSIONARY /CONTRACTIONARY
AUTOMATIC STABILIZERS
MONEY AND THE ECONOMY
QUANTITY THEORY OF MONEY EQUATION
CHAPTS 12,13.
WEEK 7-- MONEY AND BANKING - THE FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
CHAPT13.
MONETARY P0LICY. THE FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
KEYNESIAN CHAIN, THE EFFECTS OF AN EASY MONEY POLICY.
MONETARISM VS. KEYNESIAN THEORY AND POLICY
C+I+G+X VS. MV=PQ. CHAPT 14,15.
WEEK 8 SUPPLY SIDE POLICY SHORT RUN OPTIONS AND THEORY VS.
REALITY. CHAPTS 16 AND 18
TEST 3
WEEK 9
MAKE UP EXAMS AND REVIEW FOR FINALS.
.
WEEK 10 – FINAL EXAMS SEE HCCS WEBSITE FOR DATES AND TMES.