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Official Course
Description: MCCCD Approval: 05/23/06 |
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ECN211 20072-99999
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LEC |
3 Credit(s) |
3 Period(s) |
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Macroeconomic Principles |
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A descriptive analysis of the structure and functioning of the American economy. Emphasis on basic economic institutions and factors that determine national income and employment levels. Consideration given to the macroeconomic topics of national income, unemployment, inflation and monetary and fiscal policies. Prerequisites: None. |
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Go to Competencies Go to Outline
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MCCCD Official Course Competencies: |
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ECN211 20072-99999 |
Macroeconomic
Principles |
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1. |
Define the major concepts in economics, and describe and analyze major economic systems. (I, II) |
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2. |
Describe the determinants of supply and demand, and the effect on equilibrium price. (III) |
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3. |
Identify measures of the national economy, and describe how they are compiled and analyzed. (IV) |
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4. |
Describe the Keynesian income/expenditure model. (V) |
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Describe the aggregate demand and supply curves and causes of short- and long-run equilibrium. (VI) |
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Identify major determinants of fiscal policy, and describe their impact on government decisions. (VII) |
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Describe the relationship between money and prices. (VIII) |
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8. |
Describe commercial banking procedures and the functions of the Federal Reserve System. (IX) |
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9. |
Describe U.S. monetary policy and problems which occur. (X) |
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10. |
Describe the causes and effects on the economy of inflation and unemployment (XI) |
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11. |
Describe stabilization policy and the implications of the Phillips curves. (XI, XII) |
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12. |
Describe the evolution of the international monetary system. (XIII) |
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13. |
Describe the structure and trends of U.S. balance of payments. (XIII) |
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Go to Description Go to top of Competencies
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MCCCD Official
Course Outline: |
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ECN211 20072-99999 |
Macroeconomic Principles |
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I. Major Concepts in Economics A. Scarcity and choice B. Macro vs. microeconomics C. Positive vs. normative
economics D. Factors of production II. Analysis of Economic Systems A. Production possibility
frontier B. The economic problem C. Specialization and exchange D. Property rights III. Introduction to Supply and
Demand A. Supply 1. The supply curve 2. Factors that cause supply
curves to shift B. Demand 1. The law of demand 2. Factors that cause demand
curves to shift C. Equilibrium of demand and
supply 1. What the market accomplishes 2. Effects of price ceilings D. Changes in equilibrium price IV. Measuring the National
Economy A. Dynamic measures of the
economy 1. Unemployment 2. Inflation 3. Business cycles B. The circular flow of economic
activity C. National income accounting 1. Gross national product/gross
domestic product 2. Real gross national product 3. National income 4. Leakages equal injections 5. Balance of trade V. The Keynesian
Income/Expenditure Model A. The Classical model B. The income/expenditure
approach 1. Consumption, income, and
savings 2. The marginal propensities 3. Other factors that affect
consumption C. Equilibrium income and
expenditures D. Multipliers E. The theory of investment VI. Aggregate Demand and
Aggregate Supply A. Aggregate demand curve B. Aggregate supply C. Short-run equilibrium 1. Supply shocks 2. Shifts in aggregate demand 3. Inflationary and deflationary
gaps D. Long-run equilibrium VII. Fiscal Policy A. Automatic stabilizers B. Taxation C. Discretionary fiscal policy D. Link between government and
trade deficits E. Effectiveness of fiscal
policy 1. Multipliers and crowding out 2. Lags in fiscal policy F. Line-item veto and balanced
budget amendment VIII. Money and Prices A. The functions of money B. The supply of money C. The relationship between
money and prices 1. Classical quantity theory of
money 2. The velocity of circulation 3. The equation of exchange 4. Changes in money supply and
prices IX. Commercial Banking and the
Federal Reserve A. Commercial banking B. How banks create money 1. Monetization of debt 2. The deposit multiplier 3. Money expansion in the real
world-the money multiplier C. International banking D. The Federal Reserve 1. History and function 2. Present role E. The FDIC (Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation) and FSLIC (Federal Savings and Loan Insurance
Corporation) X. Monetary Policy A. Policy tools B. Keynesian monetary policy C. Money growth and interest
rate targeting D. Problems of monetary policy 1. Lags in monetary policy 2. Problems of controlling the
money supply 3. Knowing the money multiplier XI. Inflation and Unemployment A. Inflation 1. Demand-side and supply-side
inflation 2. Monetary growth and inflation
3. Inflation and interest rates 4. Inflation expectations B. Changes in the natural rate
of unemployment C. The Phillips curve 1. The breakdown of the Phillips
curve 2. The short-run and long-run
Phillips curves XII. Stabilization Policy A. Implications of the Phillips
curves B. Activism versus nonactivism C. New policy directions XIII. International Trade A. The evolution of the
international monetary system B. International trade
agreements and the balance of payments |