| source Yale (X) |
level |
department Economics (X) |
MW 2.30-3.45 Fall 2009 Final exam scheduled (Group 64) 12/19/2009 S 9.00 Skills QR Areas So Permission of instructor required Introductory microeconomics with a special emphasis on quantitative methods and examples. Intended for students with limited or no experience with calculus.
Score: 7.623257 Details | Listing | Web page
MW 11.35-12.50 Fall 2009 Final exam scheduled (Group 64) 12/19/2009 S 9.00 Permission of instructor required Similar to ECON 115a or b, but taught as a lecture discussion with limited enrollment.
Score: 7.623257 Details | Listing | Web page
MW 1.00-2.15 Fall 2009 Final exam scheduled (Group 64) 12/19/2009 S 9.00 Permission of instructor required Similar to ECON 115a or b, but taught as a lecture discussion with limited enrollment.
Score: 7.623257 Details | Listing | Web page
Fall 2009 Final exam scheduled (Group 64) 12/19/2009 S 9.00 Permission of instructor required Similar to ECON 115a or b, but taught as a lecture discussion with limited enrollment.
Score: 7.623257 Details | Listing | Web page
TTh 9.00-10.15 Fall 2009 Final exam scheduled (Group 64) 12/19/2009 S 9.00 Permission of instructor required Similar to ECON 115a or b, but taught as a lecture discussion with limited enrollment.
Score: 7.623257 Details | Listing | Web page
TTh 11.35-12.50 Fall 2009 Final exam scheduled (Group 64) 12/19/2009 S 9.00 Permission of instructor required Similar to ECON 115a or b, but taught as a lecture discussion with limited enrollment.
Score: 7.623257 Details | Listing | Web page
TTh 1.00-2.15 Fall 2009 Final exam scheduled (Group 64) 12/19/2009 S 9.00 Permission of instructor required Similar to ECON 115a or b, but taught as a lecture discussion with limited enrollment.
Score: 7.623257 Details | Listing | Web page
MW 1.00-2.15 Fall 2009 Final exam scheduled (Group 36) 12/14/2009 M 2.00 Skills QR Areas So An introduction to the basic tools of microeconomics to provide a rigorous framework for understanding how individuals, firms, markets, and governments allocate scarce resources. The design and evaluation of public policy.
Score: 7.623257 Details | Listing | Web page
TTh 1.00-2.15 Fall 2009 Final exam scheduled (Group 26) 12/15/2009 T 2.00 Areas So An introduction that stresses how the macroeconomy works, including the determination of output, unemployment, inflation, interest rates, and exchange rates. Economic theory is applied to current events.
Score: 7.623257 Details | Listing | Web page
MW 9.00-10.15 Fall 2009 Final exam scheduled (Group 32) 12/12/2009 S 9.00 Core Course The theory of resource allocation and its applications. Topics include the theory of choice, consumer and firm behavior, production, price determination in different market structures, welfare, and market failure.
Score: 7.623257 Details | Listing | Web page
MW 11.35-12.50 Fall 2009 Final exam scheduled (Group 34) 12/17/2009 Th 9.00 Core Course Contemporary theories of employment, finance, money, business fluctuations, and economic growth. Their implications for monetary and fiscal policy. Emphasis on empirical studies, financial and monetary crises, and recent policies and problems.
Score: 7.623257 Details | Listing | Web page
MW 1.00-2.15 Fall 2009 Final exam scheduled (Group 36) 12/14/2009 M 2.00 Skills QR Areas So Core Course Similar to ECON 121a or b but with a more intensive treatment of consumer and producer theory, and covering additional topics including choice under uncertainty, game theory, contracting under hidden actions or hidden information, externalities and public goods, and general equilibrium theory.
Score: 7.623257 Details | Listing | Web page
TTh 9.00-10.15 Fall 2009 Final exam scheduled (Group 22) 12/12/2009 S 2.00 Core Course Basic probability theory and statistics, distribution theory, estimation and inference, bivariate regression, introduction to multivariate regression, introduction to statistical computing.
Score: 7.623257 Details | Listing | Web page
TTh 9.00-10.15 Fall 2009 Final exam scheduled (Group 22) 12/12/2009 S 2.00 Core Course Continuation of ECON 131a or b, with a focus on multivariate regression. Topics include statistical inference, choice of functional form, heteroskedasticity, serial correlation, two-stage least squares, qualitative choice models, time series models, and forecasting. Emphasis on statistical computing and the mechanics of how to conduct and present empirical research.
Score: 7.623257 Details | Listing | Web page
TTh 9.00-10.15 Fall 2009 Final exam scheduled (Group 22) 12/12/2009 S 2.00 Skills QR Areas So Foundations of mathematical statistics: probability theory, distribution theory, parameter estimation, hypothesis testing, regression, and computer programming.
Score: 7.623257 Details | Listing | Web page
TTh 2.30-3.45 Fall 2009 Final exam scheduled (Group 27) 12/17/2009 Th 2.00 Areas So Application of economic principles to the study of the U.S. health care system. Emphasis on basic principles about the structure of the U.S. system, current problems, proposed solutions, and the context of health policy making and politics.
Score: 7.623257 Details | Listing | Web page
TTh 9.00-10.15 Fall 2009 Final exam scheduled (Group 22) 12/12/2009 S 2.00 Areas So European economic growth and development from the industrialization of Germany and other Continental countries in the early nineteenth century to World War I. The role of institutional development, the role of trade and imperialism, agricultural improvements, and industrialization.
Score: 7.623257 Details | Listing | Web page
TTh 11.35-12.50 Fall 2009 Final exam scheduled (Group 24) 12/15/2009 T 9.00 Skills QR Areas So Capital asset pricing model, arbitrage pricing theory, option pricing, social security, operation of security exchanges, investment banks, securitization, mortgage derivatives, interest rate derivatives, hedge funds, financial crises, agency theory, and financial incentives.
Score: 7.623257 Details | Listing | Web page
MW 1.00-2.15 Fall 2009 Final exam scheduled (Group 36) 12/14/2009 M 2.00 Skills QR Areas So Introduction to empirical methods in finance. Topics include cross-section regression and time series with applications to portfolio theory and option pricing. .
Score: 7.623257 Details | Listing | Web page
TTh 1.00-2.15 Fall 2009 Final exam scheduled (Group 26) 12/15/2009 T 2.00 Areas So The written contracts that organize relationships between parties engaging in economic exchange. The design of contracts and the body of law that governs and influences their economic efficiency.
Score: 7.623257 Details | Listing | Web page
MWF 10.30-11.20 Fall 2009 Final exam scheduled (Group 33) 12/18/2009 F 9.00 Skills QR Areas So Microeconomic theory brought to bear on current issues in natural resource policy. Topics include regulation of pollution, hazardous waste management, depletion of the world?s forests and fisheries, wilderness and wildlife preservation, and energy planning.
Score: 7.623257 Details | Listing | Web page
TTh 1.00-2.15 Fall 2009 Final exam scheduled (Group 26) 12/15/2009 T 2.00 Skills QR Areas So An introduction to general equilibrium theory and its extension to equilibria involving uncertainty and time. Discussion of the economic role of insurance and of intertemporal models, namely, the overlapping generations model and the optimal growth theory model.
Score: 7.623257 Details | Listing | Web page
TTh 1.00-2.15 Fall 2009 Final exam scheduled (Group 26) 12/15/2009 T 2.00 Areas So Permission of instructor required Overview of the state of knowledge in the field of labor economics; introduction to research methods. Labor markets, labor supply and welfare programs, retirement and social security, wage determination, human capital, gender and racial discrimination, inequality, immigration and migration, unions, and unemployment.
Score: 7.623257 Details | Listing | Web page
M 1.00-3.20 Fall 2009 No regular final examination Areas So Permission of instructor required Examination of investment management in theory and practice. Discussion of asset allocation, investment strategy, and manager selection from the perspective of an institutional investor. Focus on the degree of market efficiency and opportunity for generating attractive returns. Preregistration for junior and senior majors, held in Room 101, 28 Hillhouse Avenue, is required during the designated sign-up period.
Score: 7.623257 Details | Listing | Web page
Fall 2009 No regular final examination Areas So Permission of instructor required The impact of limits to arbitrage; psychological biases on asset prices and investment behavior. Analysis of documented deviations from the predictions of traditional financial theory. Preregistration for junior and senior majors, held in Room 101, 28 Hillhouse Avenue, is required during the designated sign-up period.
Score: 7.623257 Details | Listing | Web page