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Catalog Year 2025-2026

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EconomicsCredits

This course examines the economics of professional and collegiate sports and sports institutions. Students examine the market for sports competitions, the labor market for player talent, and the role government plays in the business of sports.

Prerequisites:
ECON 202
Areas of Interest:
Government and Public Administration
Programs:

Fundamental ideas and structure of economics with emphasis on the application of such ideas in the K-12 school curriculum.

Areas of Interest:
Government and Public Administration
Programs:

Public expenditures, taxes and other revenues, debts and financial administration at federal, state, and local levels.

Prerequisites:
ECON 201 and ECON 202
Areas of Interest:
Government and Public Administration
Programs:

Economic underdevelopment and the relationships between mature economies and developing nations.

Prerequisites:
ECON 201 and ECON 202
Areas of Interest:
Government and Public Administration
Programs:

The study of methods and techniques for building econometric models with the goal of forecasting and measurement of the economic relationships by integrating economic theory and statistics in it.

Prerequisites:
ECON 201, ECON 202, and ECON 207
Graduation Requirements:
Writing Intensive
Areas of Interest:
Government and Public Administration
Programs:

This course is designed to cover basic tools in time series analysis and to equip students with quantitative skills to analyze the financial market.Fall

Prerequisites:
ECON 207
Areas of Interest:
Government and Public Administration
Programs:

This course is an introduction to non-competitive markets using economic models and game theory.

Prerequisites:
ECON 201, ECON 202 and ECON 207
Areas of Interest:
Government and Public Administration
Programs:

Variable

Prerequisites:
ECON 201 and ECON 202
Areas of Interest:
Government and Public Administration
Programs:

Variable

Areas of Interest:
Government and Public Administration
Programs:

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Areas of Interest:
Government and Public Administration
Programs:

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Prerequisites:
ECON 207, ECON 355, ECON 356
Areas of Interest:
Government and Public Administration
Programs:

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Prerequisites:
ECON 201 and ECON 202
Areas of Interest:
Government and Public Administration
Programs:

Employment, wages, and economic security. The structure and impact of labor organizations and labor legislation. Prerequisite: ECON 201 and 202

A detailed examination of the Federal Reserve System and monetary policy. The topics will include a history of the Federal Reserve and its monetary tools and strategies: Monetarism, the demand for money, the money supply process, and the impact of financial deregulation on federal policy.

Emphasis on philosophy, structure, process of negotiation, grievances, arbitration, important developments and trends, and economic impact of collective bargaining.

Economics forces which account for the development of cities and application of principles to some of the major problems of the modern urban community.

This course introduces economic concepts and techniques in the study of environmental management and natural resource use. Topics covered include nonmarket valuation of the environment, benefit-cost analysis, public goods and externalities, the extraction of exhaustible and renewable resources, and the economics of pollution control.

This course examines the economics of professional and collegiate sports and sports institutions. Students examine the market for sports competitions, the labor market for player talent, and the role government plays in the business of sports.

The economic rationale for interregional trade: emphasis on current problems.

Fundamental ideas and structure of economics with emphasis on the application of such ideas in the K-12 school curriculum.

Public expenditures, taxes and other revenues, debts and financial administration at federal, state, and local levels.

Economic underdevelopment and the relationships between mature economies and developing nations.

This course is designed to cover basic tools in time series analysis and to equip students with quantitative skills to analyze the financial market. Pre-req: ECON 207 or with permission by the instructor.

Programs:

Prerequisite: ECON 201 and 202