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The Department of Economics
309 Business Bldg. Box 19479 817-272-3061
http://economics.uta.edu
Students who plan to earn a degree in economics
in one of the specialized fields listed below should consider the
following suggestions as to their choice of elective economics courses:
Those planning to do graduate work in
economics should include two semesters of calculus, as well as
linear algebra in their program. Additional math courses are encouraged
and should be selected with assistance from the Economics Departments
graduate advisor.
Those planning to apply for law school admission should
include Law and Economics (ECON 3305) and
Economics of Public Policies (ECON 3335) among their economics
electives.
Those planning to pursue careers in the health sector should
include Economics of Health (ECON 3301) and Economics for Managers
(ECON 4311) among their economics electives.
Those planning to work as an economic analyst should include
Public Sector Economics (ECON 3304), Industrial Organization and
Public Policy (ECON 3313), Economic Fluctuations and Forecasting
(ECON 4325), and Economics for Managers (ECON 4311) among their
economics electives.
Requirements
for a Bachelor of Science Degree in Economics
Students must have completed ECON 2305 and 2306 before enrolling
in certain upper-level economics courses. Specified prerequisites
are designated for certain courses. Waiver of either of the above
will require consent of the instructor and approval of the Dean
of the College of Business Administration.
English
1301, 1302.
Literature
Three hours of English or modern language literature above the freshman
level.
Liberal Arts Elective
Three hours above the freshman level of literature, or social and
cultural studies designated as taught in the College of Liberal
Arts, or fine arts or philosophy, or technical writing.
Political Science
2311, 2312.
History
1311, 1312.
Mathematics
MATH 1302, 1315 or 1325 and MATH 1316 or 1426.
Natural Science
Eight hours in single lab science (biology, chemistry, geology or
physics).
Fine Arts
Three hours from architecture, art, dance, music, or theatre arts.
Speech
SPCH 1301 or 2305.
Social Science
Six hours. BUSA 2302 may be used in partial satisfaction of this
requirement.
Statistics and Computer Systems
BUSA 2303, 3321.
Accounting and Finance
ACCT 2301, 2302, and three hours ACCT 3000/4000 level.
FINA 3313 or ACCT 3000/4000 level.
Major
ECON 2305, 2306, 3310, 3312, 3318, and 4331, plus 12 additional
hours of 3000/4000 level economics, with a minimum of three hours
at the 4000 level. Total hours in economics may not exceed 30.
Minor
18 hours, at least six of which shall be 3000/4000 level. (The six
hours in statistics and computer systems and the 12 hours in accounting
and finance may be used as a minor in business administration.)
Outside Electives
Six hours outside the College of Business Administration.
Other Electives
Sufficient to give the total number of hours required for a degree.
Total
125 hours, at least 39 of which must be 3000/4000 level, plus exercise
and sport activities (EXSA/DNCA) or ROTC or marching band as required.
Suggested Course Sequence
Freshman Year
First Semester: ENGL 1301; MATH
1302 or 1315 or 1325; Natural Science, 4 hours; Fine Arts, 3 hours;
HIST 1311; EXSA or ROTC or Marching BandTotal Credit 17 hours.
Second Semester: ENGL 1302; MATH
1316 or 1426; Natural Science, 4 hours; Social Science, 3 hours;
HIST 1312; EXSA or ROTC or Marching BandTotal Credit 17 hours.
Sophomore Year
First Semester: Literature, 3
hours; POLS 2311; Social Science Elective, 3 hours; ECON 2305; ACCT
2301; EXSA or ROTC or Marching BandTotal Credit 16 hours.
Second Semester: Liberal Arts
Elective, 3 hours; POLS 2312; BUSA 2303; ECON 2306; ACCT 2302; EXSA
or ROTC or Marching BandTotal Credit 16 hours.
Junior Year
First Semester: ECON 3310; ACCT
elective; Economics Elective, 3 hours; Minor, 3 hours; Outside Elective,
3 hours; SPCH 1301 or 2305Total Credit 18 hours.
Second Semester: ECON 3312; BUSA
3321; ACCT elective or FINA 3313; Minor, 6 hoursTotal Credit
15 hours.
Senior Year
First Semester: ECON 3318; Economics
Elective, 3 hours; Economics Elective (4000 level), 3 hours; Minor,
6 hoursTotal Credit 15 hours.
Second Semester: ECON 4331; Economics
Elective, 3 hours; Outside Elective, 3 hours; Minor, 3 hours; Other
Elective, 3 hoursTotal Credit 15 hours.
Requirements
for a Bachelor of Arts Degree in Economics
Students must have completed ECON 2305 and 2306 before enrolling
in certain upper-level economics courses. Specified prerequisites
are designated for certain courses. Waiver of either of the above
will require consent of the instructor and approval of the dean
of the College of Business Administration.
English
1301, 1302.
Literature
Three hours of English or modern language literature above the freshman
level.
Liberal Arts Elective
Three hours above the freshman level of literature, or social and
cultural studies designated as taught in the College of Liberal
Arts, or fine arts or philosophy, or technical writing.
Modern language
1441, 1442, 2313, and 2314.
Political Science
2311, 2312.
History
1311, 1312, 2301, 2302.
Mathematics
MATH 1302, 1315 or 1325 and MATH 1316 or 1426.
Statistics and Computer Science
BUSA 2303 and 3321.
Natural Science
Eight hours in single lab science (biology, chemistry, geology or
physics).
Fine Arts
Three hours from architecture, art, dance, music, or theatre arts.
Speech
SPCH 1301 or SPCH 2305.
Outside Electives
Six hours outside the College of Business Administration.
Other Electives
Sufficient to give the total number of hours required for a degree.
Major
30 hours in economics, including ECON 2305, 2306, 3310, 3312, 3318
and 4331, plus 12 additional hours of 3000/4000 level economics,
with a minimum of three hours of economics at the 4000 level.
Minor
18 hours, at least six of which shall be 3000/4000 level.
Total
124 hours, at least 33 of which must be 3000/4000 level, plus exercise
and sport activities (EXSA/DNCA) or ROTC or marching band as required.
Suggested Course Sequence
Freshman Year
First Semester: ENGL 1301; Modern
Language 1441; MATH 1302 or 1315 or 1325; Natural Science, 4 hours;
HIST 2301; EXSA or ROTC or Marching BandTotal Credit 18 hours.
Second Semester: ENGL 1302; Modern
Language 1442; MATH 1316 or 1426; Natural Science, 4 hours; HIST
2302; EXSA or ROTC or Marching BandTotal Credit 18 hours.
Sophomore Year
First Semester: Literature, 3
hours; Modern Language 2313; HIST 1311; ECON 2305; Fine Arts, 3
hours; EXSA or ROTC or Marching BandTotal Credit 16 hours.
Second Semester: Liberal Arts
Elective, 3 hours; Modern Language 2314; HIST 1312; ECON 2306; POLS
2311; EXSA or ROTC or Marching BandTotal Credit 16 hours.
Junior Year
First Semester: BUSA 2303; ECON
3310; POLS 2312; Minor, 3 hours; Outside Elective, 3 hoursTotal
Credit 15 hours.
Second Semester: ECON 3312; BUSA
3321; Minor, 3 hours; Outside Elective, 3 hours; SPCH 1301 or 2305Total
Credit 15 hours.
Senior Year
First Semester: ECON 3318; Economics
3000 or 4000, 6 hours; Minor, 6 hoursTotal Credit 15 hours.
Second Semester: ECON 4331; Economics
3000, 3 hours; Economics 4000, 3 hours; Minor, 6 hoursTotal
Credit 15 hours.Department of Economics Faculty
Chair
Professor D. Himarios
Professors
Amacher, Hayashi, Meiners, Mullendore
Associate Professors
Crowder, Duwaji
Assistant Professors
Depken, Sonora, R. Wilson
Lecturers
J. Himarios, Kelly, Liggett, Wehr, L. Wilson
Business Foundations
Program (FECO)
FECO 3310. FOUNDATIONS OF ECONOMICS
(3-0) 3 hours credit. A non-technical overview of microeconomic
and macroeconomic theory. Provides a survey of the key lessons of
economics: demand, supply, pricing in markets, structure of markets,
monetary policy, fiscal policy, international trade, and other key
issues that arise in general discussion. Reviews the primary tools
of economic thinking and covers the major themes that appear in
the popular media. This course is open only to non-business majors
and may not be counted towards a bachelors degree in business.
Economics (ECON)
Prefix and number in parentheses following the U.T. Arlington course
number and title is the Common Course Number designation.
Course fee information is published in the online
student Schedule of Classes at www.uta.edu/schedule. Please refer
to this Web site for a detailed listing of specific course fees.
2305. PRINCIPLES OF
MACROECONOMICS (3-0) 3 hours credit (ECON 2301). Elementary
models of the macroeconomy. Measures of aggregate economic activity
and unemployment and inflation, money and banking, monetary and
fiscal policy, international trade and payments, and applications
of theory to societys problems.
2306. PRINCIPLES OF MICROECONOMICS
(3-0) 3 hours credit (ECON 2302). The science of choice;
develops demand, supply, and the market mechanism for allocating
societys scarce resources; industry structure, antitrust regulation,
the market for resources, social issues, the environment, international
trade, and finance.
2337. ECONOMICS OF
SOCIAL ISSUES (3-0) 3 hours credit. Economic consequences
and solutions of current social issues. Each semester, a series
of topics will be covered in line with current events and the instructors
expertise to facilitate an understanding of the economic structure.
Will not serve to meet degree requirements for College of Business
Administration majors.
3301. THE ECONOMICS
OF HEALTH (3-0) 3 hours credit. Determinants of health status;
impact of economic forces on the health sector; demand for and supply
of health services; role of competition; new organizational entities;
the changing regulatory climate. Prerequisite: ECON 2306.
3302. THE ECONOMICS
OF CRIME (3-0) 3 hours credit. Economic analysis of criminal
activity and its impact on the allocation of scarce resources; economic
models of criminal behavior, optimum allocation of criminal justice
resources, public and private sector approaches to deterrence, and
current issues such as gun control and drug abuse prevention. Prerequisite:
ECON 2306 or consent of instructor.
3303. MONEY AND BANKING
(3-0) 3 hours credit. Monetary and banking systems of the
United States, including the problems of money and prices, proper
organization and functioning of commercial banking and Federal Reserve
systems, problems of monetary standards, and credit control. Recent
monetary and banking trends. Prerequisite: ECON 2305.
3304. PUBLIC SECTOR
ECONOMICS (3-0) 3 hours credit. Examines various economic
reasons that may justify government involvement in the economy with
particular focus on the problems inherent in government intervention.
It considers topics such as the efficiency and fairness of alternative
taxing systems, the growth and effects of government debt, and public
choice (how spending and taxing decisions are made). It analyzes
various government programs such as Social Security, health care,
expenditure programs for the poor, etc. Prerequisite: ECON 2306
or consent of instructor.
3305. LAW AND ECONOMICS
(3-0) 3 hours credit. A review of the economic effects of
laws and legal institutions, including property rights, the common
law of contracts and torts, regulations, and crime and punishment.
Prerequisite: ECON 2306 or consent of instructor.
3306. ECONOMICS OF
SPORTS (3-0) 3 hours credit. Applies basic economic principles
to the analysis of professional and amateur sports. Topics covered
include fan demand, advertising, team output decisions, league/conference
organization, and government and sports. The course is designed
to cater to both general business and economics majors. Prerequisite:
ECON 2306.
3310. MICROECONOMICS
(3-0) 3 hours credit. The theory of consumer behavior and
the theory of the firm. The theory of production, the theory of
cost and price determination, and resource allocation under competition,
monopoly, and imperfect competition. Prerequisites: ECON 2306 and
junior standing or consent of instructor.
3312. MACROECONOMICS
(3-0) 3 hours credit. Interactions among private sector behavior,
government policies, central bank actions and international events,
and their effects upon the resulting national living standard, employment,
growth, and prices. Particular emphasis upon modeling and the macroeconomy.
Prerequisites: ECON 2305 and junior standing or consent of instructor.
3313. INDUSTRIAL ORGANIZATION
AND PUBLIC POLICY (3-0) 3 hours credit. Explains market structure
and its relation to strategic behavior, advertising, pricing and
product differentiation decisions. Further topics include the organization
of the firm, takeovers, mergers and acquisitions, R&D, and the
various regulatory controls placed on firms and industries. Prerequisite:
ECON 2306.
3318. INTRODUCTION
TO ECONOMETRICS (3-0) 3 hours credit. The application of
economic theory and statistical techniques for the purpose of testing
hypotheses and estimating and analyzing economic phenomena. Prerequisite:
BUSA 3321 or MATH 3313.
3328. PRINCIPLES OF
TRANSPORTATION (3-0) 3 hours credit. Impact of freight and
passenger transport upon individual, business, and governmental
decision-making in an evolving, competitive world economy. Prerequisite:
ECON 2306 or consent of instructor.
3335. ECONOMICS OF
PUBLIC POLICIES (3-0) 3 hours credit. Economic analysis
of issues of general interest. A non-technical application of principles
of economics to current topics such as abortion, crime, deficit
spending, divorce, education, health care, immigration, politics,
recycling, risk and safety, Social Security, sports, and tax policy.
Prerequisite: ECON 2306 or consent of instructor.
3388. EUROPEAN ECONOMIC
HISTORY, 1750 TO PRESENT (3-0) 3 hours credit. The English
Industrial Revolution, Europes slow transformation before
1850, and large-scale industry, banking, transportation, and commerce
in the later 19th and 20th centuries. Topics for the 20th century
include depression, war, post-war economic integration, and the
collapse of communism. Prerequisite: ECON 2305 or consent of instructor.
4191, 4291, 4391.
STUDIES IN ECONOMICS (Variable credit from 1 to 3 semester hours
as arranged). Advanced studies, on an individual basis, in
the various fields of economic literature. Prerequisites: ECON 2306,
three hours of advanced economics, senior standing, and consent
of instructor.
4302. ENVIRONMENTAL
ECONOMICS (3-0) 3 hours credit. Economic forces that influence
the quality of the environment; economic theory and environmental
management; regulatory requirements for economic impact analysis;
international issues including trade and implications for Third
World economies. Prerequisite: ECON 2306.
4306. COMPARATIVE
ECONOMIC SYSTEMS (3-0) 3 hours credit. The differences between
capitalism, liberal socialism, and communism. Evaluation of the
performance and efficiency characteristics of each system. Consideration
is also given to the obstacles that confront former communist societies
seeking to reorganize, and to the possible forms of economic reconstruction
the emerging nations may undertake. Prerequisite: ECON 2306 or consent
of instructor.
4311. ECONOMICS FOR
MANAGERS (3-0) 3 hours credit. This class studies the decision-making
process involving the economic activities of a firm. It provides
the tools that help managers choose the best solution among all
possible ones to achieve the firms goal. The class is real-world
oriented and examines topics such as demand, costs, production,
market structure and market power, and pricing decisions. Prerequisites:
ECON 2306 and junior standing or consent of instructor.
4319. ECONOMIC GROWTH
AND THE MULTINATIONAL CORPORATION (3-0) 3 hours credit. The
economic effects of the multinational corporations on the world
economy: their effects on long-term capital flows, world production,
transfer of technology, and the developing countries. Prerequisites:
ECON 2305, 2306.
4321. INTERNATIONAL
TRADE (3-0) 3 hours credit. Explanations of why nations trade
and what they trade. The economics and politics of protection of
domestic industries (tariffs, quotas). U.S. and foreign trade policies.
Regional blocks (NAFTA, EEC). International factor movements (the
role of the multinational firm and labor migration). Prerequisite:
ECON 2306 or consent of instructor.
4322. INTERNATIONAL
FINANCE (3-0) 3 hours credit. The nature and instruments
of international payments. International financial institutions
and arrangements. Exchange rate, balance of payment, and income
determination theories. Prerequisite: ECON 2305 or consent of instructor.
4323. INTRODUCTION
TO MATHEMATICAL ECONOMICS (3-0) 3 hours credit. Exposes students
to certain basic mathematical concepts and methods and relates these
techniques to various types of economic analysis. Covers the mathematical
methods used in static and comparative-static analysis, optimization
problems, and simple dynamic analysis. Prerequisites: MATH 1316;
ECON 3310, 3312.
4324. MONETARY AND
FISCAL POLICY (3-0) 3 hours credit. The effects of money
on production and national income; quantity and commodity theories
of money; various theories of interest rates; instruments and policies
of Federal Reserve monetary action; proposals for monetary reform.
Central bank systems. Prerequisites: ECON 2305, 2306, and 3303 and
junior standing or consent of instructor.
4325. ECONOMIC FLUCTUATIONS
AND FORECASTING (3-0) 3 hours credit. Develops measures of
economic activity, discusses history and competing theories of the
business cycle, the role of money and interest rates; business forecasting
using leading and lagging indicators, time series analysis, and
econometric techniques. Prerequisites: ECON 2305, three hours of
advanced economics, and junior standing or consent of instructor.
4330. LABOR ECONOMICS
(3-0) 3 hours credit. Application of economic principles
to labor topics such as the demand for marriage, the demand for
children, the economics of beauty, the economics of highly paid
sports and entertainment stars, the effects of immigration on U.S.
wages and employment, workplace discrimination, the effects of affirmative
action policies, and the effects of minimum wage legislation. Prerequisite:
ECON 2306.
4331. SEMINAR IN ECONOMICS
(3-0) 3 hours credit. An integrative learning experience
required of all economics majors during the senior year of study.
The focus is on developing experience with theoretical models, data
sets, and econometric techniques; the analysis of a variety of public
policy and private sector issues. Prerequisites: ECON 3310, 3312,
3318, and senior status.
4333. TOPICS IN ECONOMICS
(3-0) 3 hours credit. Offers advanced students the opportunity
for advanced study in a particular topic or sequence of topics that
are not offered on a regular basis. Prerequisites: ECON 2305 and
2306.
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