ECONOMICS (ECON)
Joseph Ziegler, Department Chair
402 B.A. Building
575-ECON
*PHILLIPS PETROLEUM COMPANY CHAIR OF INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS AND ECONOMICS
DISTINGUISHED PROFESSOR MURRAY
*PROFESSORS BRITTON, CURINGTON, DIXON, GAY, McKINNON, ZIEGLER
*ADJUNCT PROFESSOR MILLAR
*ASSOCIATE PROFESSORS FERRIER, HOROWITZ, SCHULMAN, SONSTEGAARD
*ASSISTANT PROFESSORS BARNETT, DURHAM, LINVILL
The Department of Economics offers two concentrations within the Business
Economics major: (1) Business Economics, and (2) International Economics
and Business.
The concentration in business economics is intended for those students
who are interested primarily in business, but, at the same time, have
a desire to understand the more advanced tools of economic analysis. Such
a background is excellent preparation for careers in corporate research
and planning, as well as careers with government and regulatory agencies,
for graduate study in business and economics, and for law school. Students
who want to pursue an advanced degree in business economics can, with
appropriate planning, complete an M.A. degree at the University of Arkansas
within 12 months after receiving a B.S.B.A. degree. Please see the Economics
Department chair for more information.
The international economics and business concentration is intended for
students who wish to learn more about the international aspects of economics
and business. It provides preparation for a broad range of careers in
business, including management, marketing, and finance.
It is strongly recommended that economics majors who plan to continue
their studies at the graduate level take two semesters of Calculus (MATH
2554 and MATH 2564) and Linear Algebra (MATH 3083). These courses will
substitute for the math courses required within the Walton College of
Business Administration core (MATH 2043 and MATH 2053).
Business Economics
The courses required for the business economics concentration include
those required in the Walton College of Business Admin-istration and the
Fulbright College of Arts and Sciences. In addition, 15 hours of specified
courses (listed below) are required:
Business Economics Concentration
Complete the requirements for a B.S.B.A. .
Total General Education 63
Core Requirements of the Walton 33
College of Business Administration Course Requirements
in the Concentration
ECON 3033, Microeconomic Theory
ECON 3133, Macroeconomic Theory
ECON 4033, Hist of Economic Thought.
ECON 4333, Managerial Economics
ECON 4743, Intro to Econometrics
Junior/Senior electives within Walton College of
Business Administration
(Only six hours are permitted within major field of economics)
Total Walton College of Business Administration
Requirements
Free Electives 3
Total Degree Requirements 126
Recommended Course Sequence in Business Economics
(Follow freshman/sophomore sequence on page 181.)
Junior Year
First Semester
3 CISQ 3333, Info Systems Mgmt
3 MKTT 3433, Principles of Marketing
3 FINN 3043, Fin Mgmt Theory/Practice
3 ECON 3033, Microeconomic Theory
3 MGMT 3563, Mgmt Concepts/Orgn Behav
15 semester hours
Second Semester
3 CISQ 3603, Production & Ops Mgmt
3 ECON 3133, Macroeconomic Theory
6 Junior/senior business elective
3 Free elective
2 General education elective
17 semester hours
Senior Year
First Semester
3 ECON 4333, Managerial Economics
3 Junior/senior economics elective
6 Junior/senior business elective
5 General education electives
17 semester hours
Second Semester
3 MGMT 4833, Strategic Management
3 ECON 4033, History of Economic Thought
3 ECON 4743, Introduction to Econometrics
6 General education electives
15 semester hours
International Economics and Business
The courses required for the international economics and business concentration
include those required in the Walton College of Business Administration
and the Fulbright College of Arts and Sciences. In addition, 18 hours
of economics and business courses, 9 hours of upper-division courses in
the Fulbright College of Arts and Sciences, and 6 hours of a single foreign
language at the intermediate level or above, and 3 hours at the upper
division level in business communications, or equivalent, in the same
foreign language are specified. Any student whose minimum 6-hour requirement
includes an upper division course may choose to include business communications
among the 6 hours of required university course work in the foreign language.
International Economics and Business Concentration
Complete the requirements for a
B.S.B.A. degree as listed on page181.
(Students who need elementary-level language course work may apply ECON
2013 and 2023 in the social science area of the University Core, and the
elementary language credits will apply to the general education or free
elective area.)
General Education Electives 4
Area Study: specifically required upper-division courses in
Fulbright College of Arts and Sciences 9
(Students must select, with the consent of their academic
adviser, 9 hours of upper-division course work studying in an area of
the world (country or region) that is related to the foreign language.
This course work could include additional courses in the same foreign
language. To be included as an area study upper division language, courses
should emphasize literature or other cultural topics.)
Walton College of Business Administration
Core Requirements
Course Requirements in the Concentration
ECON 3033, Microeconomic Theory 3
ECON 3133,Macroeconomic Theory 3
ECON 4633, International Trade Policy
ECON 4643, International Monetary Policy
International bus & ECON electives 6
Junior/Senior electives within Walton 6
College of Business Administration
(Only 3 hours are permitted within major field of economics)
Total Walton College of Business 57
Administration Requirements
Free Electives 6
Total Degree Requirements 126
Recommended Course Sequence in International Economics and Business
Freshman Year
First Semester
3 ENGL 1013, Composition I
3 MATH 2053, Finite Mathematics
3 COMM 1313, Fundamentals of Comm
1 CISQ 1121L, Intro to Computer Information Systems Lab
3 University core
3 Foreign language
16 semester hours
Second Semester
3 ENGL 1023, Composition II
3 MATH 2043, Survey of Calculus
7 University core (lab science & another course)
3 Foreign language
16 semester hours
Sophomore Year
First Semester
3 ACCT 2013, Intro to Accounting Info. I
3 BLAW 2013, Legal Environment of Business
3 ECON 2013, Principles of Macroeconomics
2 CISQ 2232, Business Info. Systems
3 University core
3 Free elective
17 semester hours
Second Semester
3 ACCT 2023, Intro to Accounting Info II
3 ECON 2023, Principles of Microeconomics
3 CISQ 2013, Business Statistics
4 University core (lab science)
3 Free elective
16 semester hours
Junior Year
First Semester
3 CISQ 3333, Info Systems Mgmt
3 MKTT 3433, Principles of Marketing
3 FINN 3043, Fin Mgmt Theory/Practice
3 ECON 3033, Microeconomic Theory
3 MGMT 3563, Mgmt Concepts/Orgn Behav
15 semester hours
Second Semester
3 CISQ 3603, Production & Ops Mgmt
3 ECON 3133, Macroeconomic Theory
3 ECON 4633, International Trade Policy
3 Area study
3 University core
15 semester hours
Senior Year
First Semester
3 ECON 4643, International Monetary Policy
3 Junior/senior economics elective
3 Junior/senior business elective
3 Area study
3 International economics and business elective
15 semester hours
Second Semester
3 MGMT 4833, Strategic Management
3 Area study
3 Junior/senior business elective
3 International economics and business elective
4 General education electives
16 semester hours
NOTE: This suggested sequence of courses assumes that: (1) ECON
2013 and 2023 are taken to fulfill part of the social science bloc requirements,
and (2) area studies and foreign language fulfill part of the general
education requirements.
ECONOMICS (ECON) COURSES
ECON1123 Economic Development of the United States (FA, SP, SU) Development
of American economic institutions from Colonial times to present. Present-day
economic institutions and problems. (Credit not granted to students who
have already completed ECON 2013 and ECON 2023.)
ECON2013 Principles of Macroeconomics (FA, SP, SU) Macroeconomic analysis,
including aggregate employment, income, fiscal and monetary policy, growth
and business cycles. Prerequisite: (MATH 1203 or higher)or (MATH ACT of
25 or higher) or (MATH SAT of 580 or higher). UNIVERSITY CORE COURSE
ECON2023 Principle of Microeconomics (FA, SP, SU) Microeconomic analysis,
including market structures, supply and demand, production costs, price
and output, international economics. Prerequisite: (MATH 1203 or higher)
or (MATH ACT of 25 or higher) or (MATH SAT of 580 or higher). UNIVERSITY
CORE COURSE
ECON2143 Basic Economics-Theory and Practice (FA, SP, SU) Surveys basic
micro, macro principles and analytical tools needed to study contemporary
economic problems such as inflation, unemployment, poverty, pollution.
Not open to students majoring in Economics or Business Administration.
UNIVERSITY CORE COURSE
ECON2143H Honors Basic Economics-Theory and Practice (IR) Surveys basic
micro, macro principles and analytical tools needed to study contemporary
economic problems such as inflation, unemployment, poverty, pollution.
Not open to students majoring in Economics or Business Administration.
UNIVERSITY CORE COURSE
The following courses are not open to Business Administration students
until they have com-pleted the Pre-Business program requirements.
ECON3033 Microeconomic Theory (FA, SP, SU) Nature, scope, purpose of
economic analysis; theories of demand, production, cost, firm behavior,
allocation of resources, etc., in a market-oriented system. Prerequisite:
(ECON 2013 and ECON 2023) or ECON 2143.
ECON3053 Economics for Elementary Teachers (FA, SP, SU) For students
who plan to become teachers in elementary schools. Acquaints students
with basic concepts, functioning of the American economic system. Not
open to students majoring in Economics or Business Administration.
ECON3133 Macroeconomic Theory (FA, SP, SU) Theoretical determinations
of national aggregate employment, income, consumption, investment, price
level, etc. Prerequisite: (ECON 2013 and ECON 2023) or ECON 2143.
ECON3333 Public Finance (FA, SP, SU) Governmental functions, revenues;
tax shifting, incidence; public expenditures, their effects; fiscal policy.
Prerequisite: (ECON 2013 and ECON 2023) or ECON 2143.
ECON3533 Labor Economics (FA, SP, SU) Economic analysis of labor markets.
Topics include analysis of labor demand and supply; human capital investment;
wage differentials; discrimination; economic effects of labor unions and
collective bargaining; public sector labor markets; unemployment; and
labor market effects on inflation. Prerequisite: (ECON 2013 and ECON 2023)
or ECON 2143.
ECON3733 Experimental Economics (SP) Introduction to the use of experimental
economics with applications to monopoly, bilateral bargaining, competitive
markets under various exchange rules, speculation, and public goods. Exposes
students to a broad range of research and the methodological connections
between theory and data. Prerequisite: (ECON 2013 and ECON 2023) or ECON
2143.
ECON3833 International Trade (FA, SP) Problems of the international
economy, their significance to U.S. Prerequisite: (ECON 2013 and ECON
2023) or ECON 2143.
ECON3843 Economic Development (FA) Principles and theories that apply
to development of countries. Particularly useful in the Latin American
Studies Program. Prerequisite: (ECON 2013 and ECON 2023) or ECON 2143.
ECON3923H Honors Colloquium (IR) Covers a special topic or issue, offered
as part of honors program (primarily for Arts and Sciences students).
Prerequisite: honors candidacy (not restricted to candidacy in the department
offering the colloquium).
ECON399VH Honors Course (1-3) (IR) Primarily for students participating
in Honors program. May be repeated for 6 hours.
ECON4033 History of Economic Thought (SP) Historical, critical analysis
of economic theories relative to their instructional background. Prerequisite:
(ECON 2013 and ECON 2023) or ECON 2143.
ECON410V Special Topics in Economics (1-6) (IR) Covers special topics
in economics not available in other courses. May be repeated for 6 hours.
Prerequisite: (ECON 2013 and ECON 2023) or ECON 2143.
ECON4233 Current Economic Problems (FA, SP, SU) Analyzes current economic
problems, appraises alternative solutions. Prerequisite: (ECON 2013 and
ECON 2023) or ECON 2143.
ECON4333 Managerial Economics (FA) Applied theory of firm; emphasizes
marginalism, cost, price policy, executive decision, of resources. Prerequisite:
(ECON 2013 and ECON 2023) or ECON 2143.
ECON4343 Government in Business (FA, SP, SU) The tools of economic analysis
applied to the structure, conduct and performance of American industry
with particular emphasis on the development of regulatory policy. Various
ideologies and policy alternatives are considered. Prerequisite: (ECON
2013 and ECON 2023) or ECON 2143.
ECON450V Independent Study (1-3) (IR) Permits students on individual
basis to explore selected topics in economics.
ECON4533 Comparative Economic Systems (FA) Studies foundations of the
market system, socialist economics and other forms of economics; a comparative
evaluation of the performance of contemporary systems of economics. Prerequisite:
(ECON 2013 and ECON 2023) or ECON 2143.
ECON4633 International Trade Policy (FA, SP, SU) Problems of the international
economy from a microeconomic perspective. Topics include analysis of the
pattern and content of trade; trade in factors of production; and the
applications of trade theory to the study of trade barriers such as tariffs
and quotas. Prerequisite: (ECON 2013 and ECON 2023) or ECON 2143.
ECON4643 International Monetary Policy (FA, SP, SU) Problems of the
international economy from a macroeconomic perspective. Topics include
national income accounting and the balance of payments; exchange rates
and the foreign exchange markets; exchange rate policy; macroeconomic
policy coordination; developing countries and the problem of 3rd world
debt; and the global capital market. Prerequisite: (ECON 2013 and ECON
2023) or ECON 2143.
ECON4653 Economics of Multinational Enterprise (FA, SP, SU) The tools
of economic analysis applied to the operations of multinational enterprise.
Prerequisite: (ECON 2013 and ECON 2023) or ECON 2143.
ECON468V International Economics and Business Seminar (1-6) (FA, SP,
SU) Offered primarily in conjunction with international study abroad programs
with an emphasis on international economics and business. May be repeated
for 6 hours. Prerequisite: (ECON 2013 and ECON 2023) or ECON 2143.
ECON4733 Quantitative Economic Analysis (FA) The use of mathematics
to formulate and derive economic relationships. Prerequisite: (ECON 2013
and ECON 2023) or ECON 2143.
ECON4743 Introduction to Econometrics (SP) Introduction to the application
of statistical methods to problems in economics. Prerequisite: ((ECON
2013 and ECON 2023) or ECON 2143) and (MATH 2043 or MATH 2554) and (MATH
2053 or ECON 4733) and CISQ 2013.
The following courses are restricted to students with graduate standing
and require the consent of the instructor.
ECON512V Workshop in Economic Education (1-3) (IR) Overview of basic
economic facts and principles with emphasis on means of employing them
in the curriculum of elementary and secondary schools. Not open to majors
in business and economics. Offered for degree credit in Education only.
(Same as EDFD 512) May be repeated for 3 hours.
ECON5143 Applied Principles of Economic Development (IR) Theories of
economic development; factors affecting economic development, including
directed efforts by public, private groups. Degree credit in Education
only. Not open to students with degree programs in Economics, Agricultural
Economics or Business Administration. Prerequisite: six hours of economics
or economic education.
ECON5163 Introduction to Economic Theory and Analysis (FA, SP, SU) Introduction
to economic theory primarily for first year M.B.A. students. Surveys the
analytic tools of both micro- and macroeconomics that are necessary for
business decision making and study of contemporary economic and social
problems such as inflation, unemployment, poverty, and international trade
deficits. Prerequisite: graduate standing.
ECON5333 Managerial Economics (FA, SP, SU) Application of economic theory
to business decisions. Prerequisite: ECON 5163 and CISQ 5103 and FINN
5203 and MATH 2043 and MATH 2053.
ECON5433 Macroeconomic Theory I (FA, SU) Theoretical development of
macroeconomic models that include and explain the natural rate of unemployment
hypothesis and rational expectations, consumer behavior, demand for money,
market clearing models, investment, and fiscal policy.
ECON5533 Microeconomic Theory I (FA, SU) Introductory microeconomic
theory at the graduate level. Mathematical formulation of the consumer
choice, producer behavior, and market equilibrium problems at the level
of introductory calculus. Discussion of monopoly, oligopoly, public goods,
and externalities.
ECON5563 History of Economic Thought (FA) Seminar in development of
economic ideas, theories; causes and development of schools of thought
emphasized.
ECON5613 Econometrics (FA) Use of economic theory and statistical methods
to estimate economic models. The single equation model are examined emphasizing
multicollinearity, autocorrelation, heteroskedasticity, binary variables
and distributed lags. An introduction to the simultaneous systems model
is presented. Two 80 min. lecture periods weekly. (Same as AGEC 5613)
Prerequisite: MATH 2043 and knowledge of matrix methods, which may be
acquired as a corequisite and (AGEC 1103 or ECON 2023) and an introductory
statistics course.
ECON5623 Econometrics II (SP) Use of economic theory and statistical
methods to develop and estimate simultaneous equation models of an economy.
Emphasis given to the problem of identification and the methods of estimating
systems models. Frontier topics are introduced. (Same as AGEC 5623) Prerequisite:
ECON 5433 and ECON 5533 and (ECON 5613 or AGEC 5613).
ECON5853 International Economics Policy (SP) An intensive analysis of
the operation of the international economy with emphasis on issues of
current policy interest. Prerequisite: ECON 5163.
ECON600V Master's Thesis (1-6) (FA, SP, SU)
ECON6233 Microeconomic Theory II (SP) Advanced treatment of the central
microeconomic issues using basic real analysis. Formal discussion of duality,
general equilibrium, welfare economics, choice under uncertainty, and
game theory.
ECON6243 Macroeconomic Theory II (FA) Further development of macroeconomic
models to include uncertainty and asset pricing theory. Application of
macroeconomic models to explain real world situations.
ECON636V Special Problems in Economics (1-6) (FA, SP, SU) Independent
reading and investigation in economics.
ECON643V Seminar in Economic Theory and Research I (1-3) (FA)
ECON644V Seminar in Economic Theory and Research II (1-3) (SP) Independent
research and group discussion.
ECON6833 Seminar in International Economics (FA) A rigorous survey of
theories and empirical evidence in international economics covering the
determinants of trade and investment, commercial policy, balance of payments
adjustments, and the workings of the international monetary system. Prerequisite:
ECON 5433 and ECON 5533.
ECON700V Doctoral Dissertation (1-18) (FA, SP, SU) Prerequisite: candidacy.
|