ECO
200 MACROECONOMICS
Macroeconomics is a study of the national economy as an aggregate. The
course includes a study of the determinants of the general price level,
the rate of inflation, national income and production levels, monetary
and budgetary policies, and unemployment. Three credit hours. Offered
Fall semester (d); offered Spring semester (e).
ECO
201 MICROECONOMICS
Microeconomics focuses upon an analysis of utility and price elasticity
within the framework of the American capitalistic system. An investigation
is made of basic market structures with strong emphasis upon oligopoly
and real work issues of industrial organizations. Three credit hours.
Offered Spring semester (d); offered Fall semester (e).
ECO
260 ECONOMETRICS I
This course provides students an introduction
to statistics and its applications in business and economics. The course
concerns itself with the application of statistics and the tools of
statistical inference to the empirical measurement and testing of relationships
postulated by economic theory. This will be accomplished through a comprehensive
coverage of statistical concepts and strategies providing good preparation
for the study of more advanced statistical material. The course will
provide numerous applications of data analysis and statistical methodology
offering considerable insights into the techniques by which data should
be gathered as well as into the techniques through which a particular
set of data should be analyzed once it has been gathered.
Three credit hours. Prerequisite: MAT 114.
Offered Fall semester (d); offered every semester (e).
ECO
261 ECONOMETRICS II
This course is a continuation of ECO 260.
Statistical topics to be covered include design of experiments, analysis
of variance, simple regression, multiple regression, model building,
index numbers, forecasting, time series, chi-square and nonparametric
statistics. The estimation and testing of linear economic models of
two or more variables, statistical quality control, and decision alaysis
will be included. The course will rely on a specific computer-based
application (SPSS, MINITAB, SAS, Excel, etc.) to create graphical and
numerical outputs which will allow for in-depth interpretation of output,
sensitivity analysis and examination of alternative modeling approaches.
This course offeres students an opportunity to learn practical approaches
for analyzing data, ways of using data effectively to make informed
decisions, and approaches for developing, analyzing and solving models
of decision problems. Three credit hours.
Prerequisite: ECO 260. Offered Spring
semester (d); offered every semester (e).
ECO 498 INDEPENDENT
STUDY IN ECONOMICS