| source UCLA (X) |
level |
department Economics (X) |
Lecture, three hours; discussion, one hour. Not open to students with credit for course 100. Introduction to principles of economic analysis, economic institutions, and issues of economic policy. Emphasis on allocation of resources and distribution of income through price system. P/NP or letter grading.
Score: 6.7283845 Details | Listing | Web page
Lecture, three hours; discussion, one hour. Not open to students with credit for course 100. Introduction to principles of economic analysis, economic institutions, and issues of economic policy. Emphasis on aggregative economics, including national income, monetary and fiscal policy, and international trade. P/NP or letter grading.
Score: 6.7283845 Details | Listing | Web page
Lecture, three hours. Not open to students with credit for course 1, 2, or 100. Principles of economics as tools of analysis. Presentation of set of concepts with which to analyze wide range of social problems that economic theory illuminates. May not be used to fulfill entrance requirements for any Economics Department major. P/NP or letter grading.
Score: 6.7283845 Details | Listing | Web page
Lecture, three hours; discussion, one hour. Enforced requisites: courses 1, 2, one course from Mathematics 31B, 31BH, 31E, 32A. Laws of demand, supply, returns, and costs; price and output determination in different market situations. P/NP or letter grading.
Score: 6.7283845 Details | Listing | Web page
Seminar, one hour. Discussion of and critical thinking about topics of current intellectual importance, taught by faculty members in their areas of expertise and illuminating many paths of discovery at UCLA. P/NP grading.
Score: 6.7283845 Details | Listing | Web page
Lecture, three hours; discussion, one hour. Not open to students with credit for Statistics 11. Introduction to probability and statistics for economists, with emphasis on rigorous arguments. Letter grading.
Score: 6.7283845 Details | Listing | Web page
Seminar, three hours. Limited to 20 students. Designed as adjunct to lower division lecture course. Exploration of topics in greater depth through supplemental readings, papers, or other activities and led by lecture course instructor. May be applied toward honors credit for eligible students. Honors content noted on transcript. P/NP or letter grading.
Score: 6.7283845 Details | Listing | Web page
Tutorial, three hours. Limited to students in College Honors Program. Designed as adjunct to lower division lecture course. Individual study with lecture course instructor to explore topics in greater depth through supplemental readings, papers, or other activities. May be repeated for maximum of 4 units. Individual honors contract required. Honors content noted on transcript. Letter grading.
Score: 6.7283845 Details | Listing | Web page
Tutorial (supervised research or other scholarly work), three hours per week per unit. Entry-level research for lower division students under guidance of faculty mentor. Students must be in good academic standing and enrolled in minimum of 12 units (excluding this course). Individual contract required; consult Undergraduate Research Center. May be repeated. P/NP grading.
Score: 6.7283845 Details | Listing | Web page
Lecture, three hours. Designed for juniors/seniors. Not open to students with credit for course 1, 2, or 5. Principles of economics with application to current economic problems. May not be used to fulfill entrance requirements for any Economics Department major. P/NP or letter grading.
Score: 6.7283845 Details | Listing | Web page
Lecture, three hours; discussion, one hour. Requisite: course 11. Theory of factor pricing and income distribution; general equilibrium; implications of pricing process for optimum allocation of resources; interest and capital. P/NP or letter grading.
Score: 6.7283845 Details | Listing | Web page
Lecture, three hours; discussion, one hour. Requisite: course 101. Theory of income, employment, and price level. Analysis of secular growth and business fluctuations; introduction to monetary and fiscal policy. P/NP or letter grading.
Score: 6.7283845 Details | Listing | Web page
Lecture, three hours; discussion, one hour. Requisites: courses 11, and 41 or Statistics 11 or 100A. Introduction to theory and practice of econometrics, with goal to make students effective consumers and producers of empirical research in economics. Emphasis on intuitive understanding rather than on rigorous arguments; concepts illustrated with applications in economics. P/NP or letter grading.
Score: 6.7283845 Details | Listing | Web page
Lecture, three hours. Requisite: course 101. Designed for departmental honors program students. Introduction to Walrasian and Nash equilibrium. Modeling of selected applied topics such as peak load pricing, pricing of externalities, strategic pricing. P/NP or letter grading.
Score: 6.7283845 Details | Listing | Web page
Lecture, three hours. Requisite: course 101. Designed for departmental honors program students. Imperfect information-based models of monetary business cycles: theory and evidence. Real business cycle models: role of shocks and interindustrial technology structure in explaining fluctuations. Policy analysis and policy intervention in world with rational maximizing agents: recent perspectives. P/NP or letter grading.
Score: 6.7283845 Details | Listing | Web page
Lecture, three hours. Requisite: course 101. Enrollment priority to Business Economics majors. Application of economic theory to practice of managing new businesses -- combining elements of strategy, marketing, and entrepreneurial finance courses. Examination of both strategic decisions of entrepreneurs (pricing, advertising, deterring entry) and more practical issues (funding, business plans, patents). Letter grading.
Score: 6.7283845 Details | Listing | Web page
Lecture, three hours. Requisite: course 102. Enrollment priority to Business Economics majors. Introduction to principles of asset valuation and role of financial markets in market economy. Basic topics include time value of money, discounted cash flow analysis, CAPM model, and applications to public policy. Letter grading.
Score: 6.7283845 Details | Listing | Web page
Lecture, three hours; discussion, one to two hours (when scheduled). Requisite: course 101. Enrollment priority to Business Economics majors. Introduction to basic ideas of game theory and strategic thinking. Discussion of ideas such as dominance, backward induction, Nash equilibrium, commitment, credibility, asymmetric information, and signaling, with application to examples from economics, politics, business, and other real-life situations. Letter grading.
Score: 6.7283845 Details | Listing | Web page
Lecture, three hours. Requisite: course 101. Enrollment priority to Business Economics majors. Study of role of innovation in history of American enterprise. Examination of specific episodes of salient entrepreneurial innovation, as well as general theoretical and empirical treatments. Letter grading.
Score: 6.7283845 Details | Listing | Web page
Lecture, three hours. Requisites: courses 11, 101. Enrollment priority to Business Economics majors. Role of firms in traditional economic theory and modern developments in theory of firms. Functions of ownership and management in face of risk and opportunism. Internal organization of firms. Problem of separation of ownership from control in modern corporations. Determinates of firm size, vertical integration, and degree of specialization of activities of firms. Decision making within firms in democratic setting. P/NP or letter grading.
Score: 6.7283845 Details | Listing | Web page
Lecture, three hours. Requisite: course 101. Enrollment priority to Business Economics majors. Advanced pricing topics typically include linear programming and shadow pricing, peak load pricing, two-part pricing, strategic pricing, and auctions and bidding. Letter grading.
Score: 6.7283845 Details | Listing | Web page
Lecture, three hours. Requisite: course 102. Recommended: course 106F. Enrollment priority to Business Economics majors. Introduction to principles investment and portfolio theory. Topics include optimal portfolio construction, fixed income analysis, option pricing theory, and active portfolio management. P/NP or letter grading.
Score: 6.7283845 Details | Listing | Web page
Lecture, three hours. Requisite: course 1 or 100. Survey of economic analysis from Grecian antiquity to early 20th century, concentrating on 18th and 19th centuries; special attention to selected writers, including Aristotle, mercantilists, Physiocrats, Hume, Smith, Malthus, Ricardo, Marx, marginalists, and Marshall. P/NP or letter grading.
Score: 6.7283845 Details | Listing | Web page
Lecture, three hours. Requisite: course 1 or 100. Limited to non-Economics Department majors. Not open for credit to students with credit for course 111 or 112. Survey of major issues of development economics. Economic structure of low-income countries and primary causes for their limited economic growth. Economic goals and policy alternatives open to their leaders. Possible roles of developed countries. May not be applied toward any Economics Department major. P/NP or letter grading.
Score: 6.7283845 Details | Listing | Web page
Lecture, three hours. Requisite: course 11. Growth models, theory of production under constraints, relative factor prices and their impact on choice of technology, investment criteria, role of market, economic planning in less developed areas. P/NP or letter grading.
Score: 6.7283845 Details | Listing | Web page
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