Economics
The Economics Department focuses on a range of topics such as international trade, domestic and international financial systems, labor-market analysis, and the study of less-developed economies. The summer course offerings include core theoretical courses as well as more advanced, special interest courses.
For questions about specific courses, contact the department.
Courses
Equivalent to ECON UN1105, the first course for the major in economics. How a market economy determines the relative prices of goods, factors of production, and the allocation of resources; the circumstances under which it does these things efficiently. Why such an economy has fluctuations and how they may be controlled.
Course Number
ECON1105S001Format
In-PersonSession
Session XPoints
4 ptsSummer 2025
Times/Location
Mo 10:20-11:55We 10:20-11:55Section/Call Number
001/10042Enrollment
13 of 50Instructor
Renee GarrowPrerequisites: ECON UN1105 The course surveys issues of interest in the American economy, including economic measurement, well-being and income distribution, business cycles and recession, the labor and housing markets, saving and wealth, fiscal policy, banking and finance, and topics in central banking. We study historical issues, institutions, measurement, current performance and recent research.
Course Number
ECON2105W001Format
In-PersonSession
Session BPoints
3 ptsSummer 2025
Times/Location
Mo 17:00-20:10We 17:00-20:10Section/Call Number
001/10043Enrollment
17 of 30Instructor
Claudia HalbacThe purpose of this course is to provide a basic introduction to accounting, including the
foundations of accounting concepts, the underlying mechanics, and the overall perspective required
to become intelligent users of accounting information. The course will focus on the main
financial statements, the nature of accrual measurement, and the information perspective. In addition,
we will explore some accounting methods in detail, such as revenue recognition, assets,
liabilities, and equity.
The overarching perspective is that accounting reports provide information that is useful for
a variety of purposes. In the course, I will also provide insights into how the financial markets
use accounting information to evaluate executives, predict future stock returns, assess firms’
riskiness, and allocate society’s resources to their most productive uses.
Course Number
ECON2261W001Format
In-PersonSession
Session APoints
3 ptsSummer 2025
Times/Location
Mo 09:00-12:10We 09:00-12:10Section/Call Number
001/11156Enrollment
9 of 30Instructor
Dian JiaoThe purpose of this course is to provide a basic introduction to accounting, including the
foundations of accounting concepts, the underlying mechanics, and the overall perspective required
to become intelligent users of accounting information. The course will focus on the main
financial statements, the nature of accrual measurement, and the information perspective. In addition,
we will explore some accounting methods in detail, such as revenue recognition, assets,
liabilities, and equity.
The overarching perspective is that accounting reports provide information that is useful for
a variety of purposes. In the course, I will also provide insights into how the financial markets
use accounting information to evaluate executives, predict future stock returns, assess firms’
riskiness, and allocate society’s resources to their most productive uses.
Course Number
ECON2261W002Format
In-PersonSession
Session BPoints
3 ptsSummer 2025
Times/Location
Tu 09:00-12:10Th 09:00-12:10Section/Call Number
002/11157Enrollment
14 of 30Instructor
Sonakshi AgrawalPrerequisites: STAT UN1201, ECON UN3211 Intermediate Microeconomics and ECON UN3213 Intermediate Macroeconomics. Equivalent to ECON UN3025. Institutional nature and economic function of financial markets. Emphasis on both domestic and international markets (debt, stock, foreign exchange, Eurobond, Eurocurrency, futures, options, and others). Principles of security pricing and portfolio management; the capital asset pricing model and the efficient markets hypothesis.
Course Number
ECON3025S001Format
In-PersonSession
Session APoints
3 ptsSummer 2025
Times/Location
Mo 09:00-12:10We 09:00-12:10Section/Call Number
001/10044Enrollment
10 of 30Instructor
Lucas RossoPrerequisites: STAT UN1201, ECON UN3211 Intermediate Microeconomics and ECON UN3213 Intermediate Macroeconomics. Equivalent to ECON UN3025. Institutional nature and economic function of financial markets. Emphasis on both domestic and international markets (debt, stock, foreign exchange, Eurobond, Eurocurrency, futures, options, and others). Principles of security pricing and portfolio management; the capital asset pricing model and the efficient markets hypothesis.
Course Number
ECON3025S002Format
In-PersonSession
Session BPoints
3 ptsSummer 2025
Times/Location
Tu 09:00-12:10Th 09:00-12:10Section/Call Number
002/10045Enrollment
8 of 30Instructor
A. Vivette AnconaPrerequisites: MATH UN1101 and ECON UN1105 or the equivalent; one term of calculus. Corequisites: MATH UN1201. This course covers the determination of output, employment, inflation and interest rates. Topics include economic growth, business cycles, monetary and fiscal policy, consumption and savings and national income accounting.
Course Number
ECON3213S001Format
In-PersonSession
Session XPoints
4 ptsSummer 2025
Times/Location
Mo 10:20-11:55We 10:20-11:55Section/Call Number
001/10046Enrollment
16 of 50Instructor
Rodrigo PachecoPrerequisites: ECON UN3211 and ECON UN3213 or the equivalent. Introduction to the principles of money and banking. The intermediary institutions of the American economy and their historical developments, current issues in monetary and financial reform.
Course Number
ECON3265V001Format
In-PersonSession
Session APoints
3 ptsSummer 2025
Times/Location
Mo 09:00-12:10We 09:00-12:10Section/Call Number
001/10047Enrollment
9 of 30Instructor
Grace ChuanPrerequisites: ECON UN3211 and ECON UN3213 or the equivalent. Introduction to the principles of money and banking. The intermediary institutions of the American economy and their historical developments, current issues in monetary and financial reform.
Course Number
ECON3265V002Format
In-PersonSession
Session BPoints
3 ptsSummer 2025
Times/Location
Tu 13:00-16:10Th 13:00-16:10Section/Call Number
002/10048Enrollment
21 of 30Instructor
Ankit BhutaniPrerequisites: STAT UN1201 Intro to Stats w/Calculus, MATH UN1201 Calculus III, and either intermediate micro or macro (UN3211 or UN3213). Equivalent to ECON UN3412. Modern econometric methods, the general linear statistical model and its extensions, simultaneous equations and the identification problem, time series problems, forecasting methods, extensive practice with the analysis of different types of data.
Course Number
ECON3412S001Format
In-PersonSession
Session XPoints
4 ptsSummer 2025
Times/Location
Tu 10:20-11:55Th 10:20-11:55Section/Call Number
001/10049Enrollment
9 of 50Instructor
Seyhan ErdenUncertainty is ubiquitous and information about that uncertainty plays a key role in economic
decision-making and exchange. In this course, we will first consider how individuals and society
can manage uncertainty. We will then focus on how economic relationships may suffer from
some parties not having all the information that is relevant to their decision-making. We will see
how these kinds of information asymmetries invite lying and cheating. We will also study how
parties can structure their agreements to address the problems that such information asymmetries
create.
Course Number
ECON4020S001Format
In-PersonSession
Session APoints
3 ptsSummer 2025
Times/Location
Tu 09:00-12:10Th 09:00-12:10Section/Call Number
001/10626Enrollment
3 of 30Instructor
Ingmar NymanPrerequisites: ECON UN3211 and ECON UN3213. This course examines labor markets through the lens of economics. In broad terms, labor economics is the study of the exchange of labor services for wages—a category that takes in a wide range of topics. Our objective in this course is to lay the foundations for explaining labor market phenomena within an economic framework and subsequently apply this knowledge-structure to a select set of questions. Throughout this process we will discuss empirical research, which will highlight the power (as well as the limitations) of employing economic models to real-world problems. By the end of this course we will have the tools/intuition to adequately formulate and critically contest arguments concerning labor markets.
Course Number
ECON4400S001Format
In-PersonSession
Session APoints
3 ptsSummer 2025
Times/Location
Tu 13:00-16:10Th 13:00-16:10Section/Call Number
001/10050Enrollment
8 of 30Instructor
Oksana KuznetsovaPrerequisites: ECON UN3211 and ECON UN3213. Equivalent to ECON UN4415. Introduction to the systematic treatment of game theory and its applications in economic analysis.
Course Number
ECON4415S001Format
In-PersonSession
Session APoints
3 ptsSummer 2025
Times/Location
Mo 09:00-12:10We 09:00-12:10Section/Call Number
001/10051Enrollment
8 of 30Instructor
Murat YilmazPrerequisites: ECON UN3211 and ECON UN3213. Equivalent to ECON UN4415. Introduction to the systematic treatment of game theory and its applications in economic analysis.
Course Number
ECON4415S002Format
In-PersonSession
Session BPoints
3 ptsSummer 2025
Times/Location
Mo 09:00-12:10We 09:00-12:10Section/Call Number
002/10052Enrollment
10 of 30Instructor
Hannah KrisPrerequisites: ECON UN3211 and ECON UN3213. Equivalent to ECON UN4500. The theory of international trade, comparative advantage and the factor endowments explanation of trade, analysis of the theory and practice of commercial policy, economic integration. International mobility of capital and labor, the North-South debate.
Course Number
ECON4500S001Format
In-PersonSession
Session APoints
3 ptsSummer 2025
Times/Location
Tu 13:00-16:10Th 13:00-16:10Section/Call Number
001/10053Enrollment
11 of 30Instructor
Pablo de Llanos ArteroPrerequisites: ECON UN3211 and ECON UN3213 and ECON UN3412 Selected topics in microeconomics.