Title | Instructors | Location | Time | Description | Cross listings | Fulfills | Registration notes | Syllabus | Syllabus URL | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
ECON 001-001 | Introduction To Micro Economics | Anne L Duchene | MW 09:00 AM-10:00 AM | Introduction to economic analysis and its application. Theory of supply and demand, costs and revenues of the firm under perfect competition, monopoly and oligopoly, pricing of factors of production, income distribution, and theory of international trade. Econ 1 deals primarily with microeconomics. | Society Sector | Crse Online: Sync & Async Components Registration also required for Recitation (see below) |
Syllabus ECON1 S21.pdf140.33 KB | https://pennintouchdaemon.apps.upenn.edu/pennInTouchProdDaemon/jsp/fast.do?webService=syllabus&term=2021A&course=ECON001001 | |||
ECON 001-002 | Introduction To Micro Economics | Anne L Duchene | MW 10:00 AM-11:00 AM | Introduction to economic analysis and its application. Theory of supply and demand, costs and revenues of the firm under perfect competition, monopoly and oligopoly, pricing of factors of production, income distribution, and theory of international trade. Econ 1 deals primarily with microeconomics. | Society Sector | Crse Online: Sync & Async Components Registration also required for Recitation (see below) |
Syllabus_Econ002_SP21.pdf215.23 KB | https://pennintouchdaemon.apps.upenn.edu/pennInTouchProdDaemon/jsp/fast.do?webService=syllabus&term=2021A&course=ECON001002 | |||
ECON 001-601 | Intro To Microeconomics | Dohan Kim | M 06:00 PM-09:00 PM | Introduction to economic analysis and its application. Theory of supply and demand, costs and revenues of the firm under perfect competition, monopoly and oligopoly, pricing of factors of production, income distribution, and theory of international trade. Econ 1 deals primarily with microeconomics. | Society Sector | Course Online: Synchronous Format | [ECON001_061] Spring21_Syllabus_ver_2021_01_29.pdf59.94 KB | ||||
ECON 002-001 | Introductory Economics: Macro | Luca Bossi | MW 10:00 AM-11:00 AM | Introduction to economic analysis and its application. An examination of a market economy to provide an understanding of how the size and composition of national output are determined. Elements of monetary and fiscal policy, international trade, economic development, and comparative economic systems. | Society Sector | Course is available to Freshmen and Upperclassmen. Crse Online: Sync & Async Components Registration also required for Recitation (see below) |
2021a_econ002_bossi.pdf215.23 KB | https://pennintouchdaemon.apps.upenn.edu/pennInTouchProdDaemon/jsp/fast.do?webService=syllabus&term=2021A&course=ECON002001 | |||
ECON 002-002 | Introductory Economics: Macro | Luca Bossi | MW 11:00 AM-12:00 PM | Introduction to economic analysis and its application. An examination of a market economy to provide an understanding of how the size and composition of national output are determined. Elements of monetary and fiscal policy, international trade, economic development, and comparative economic systems. | Society Sector | Crse Online: Sync & Async Components Registration also required for Recitation (see below) |
2021a_econ002_bossi_0.pdf215.23 KB | https://pennintouchdaemon.apps.upenn.edu/pennInTouchProdDaemon/jsp/fast.do?webService=syllabus&term=2021A&course=ECON002002 | |||
ECON 002-601 | Intro Macroeconomics | Justin Franco Lam | T 06:00 PM-09:00 PM | Introduction to economic analysis and its application. An examination of a market economy to provide an understanding of how the size and composition of national output are determined. Elements of monetary and fiscal policy, international trade, economic development, and comparative economic systems. | Society Sector | Course Online: Synchronous Format | |||||
ECON 013-401 | Strategic Reasoning | Deniz Selman | MW 03:30 PM-05:00 PM | This course is about strategically interdependent decisions. In such situations, the outcome of your actions depends also on the actions of others. When making your choice, you have to think what the others will choose, who in turn are thinking what you will be choosing, and so on. Game Theory offers several concepts and insights for understanding such situations, and for making better strategic choices. This course will introduce and develop some basic ideas from game theory, using illustrations, applications, and cases drawn from business, economics, politics, sports, and even fiction and movies. Some interactive games will be played in class. There will be little formal theory, and the only pre-requisites are some high-school algebra and having taken ECON 001. However, general numeracy (facility interpreting and doing numerical graphs, tables, and arithmetic calculations) is very important. This course will also be accepted by the Economics department as an Econ course, to be counted toward the minor in Economics (or as an Econ elective). Prerequisite: This course course may not be taken concurrently with or after ECON 212. | PPE311401 | Permission Needed From Instructor Crse Online: Sync & Async Components |
ECON 13 Syllabus Spring 2021 Selman.pdf87.5 KB | https://pennintouchdaemon.apps.upenn.edu/pennInTouchProdDaemon/jsp/fast.do?webService=syllabus&term=2021A&course=ECON013401 | |||
ECON 032-001 | Political Economy | Deniz Selman | TR 12:00 PM-01:30 PM | This course examines the effects of strategic behavior on political outcomes and government policies. Topics and applications may include voting behavior, candidate competition, voting systems, social choice and welfare, policy divergence, redistributive policies and theories of political transitions. Credit will NOT be given for ECON 032 and ECON 232. | Crse Online: Sync & Async Components | ECON 32 Syllabus Spring 2021 Selman.pdf87.17 KB | https://pennintouchdaemon.apps.upenn.edu/pennInTouchProdDaemon/jsp/fast.do?webService=syllabus&term=2021A&course=ECON032001 | ||||
ECON 039-401 | Econ & Fincing-Hlthcr Dl | Alexander Olssen | TR 03:00 PM-04:30 PM | The course provides an application of economic models to demand, supply, and their interaction in the medical economy. Influences on demand, especially health status, insurance coverage, and income will be analyzed. Physician decisions on the pricing and form of their own services, and on the advice they offer about other services, will be considered. Competition in medical care markets, especially for hospital services, will be studied. Special emphasis will be placed on government as demander of medical care services. Changes in Medicare and regulation of managed care are among the public policy issues to be addressed. Prerequisite: If course requirement not met, permission of instructor required. | HCMG202401 | Course Online: Synchronous Format | SYLLABUS-202-2021.pdf243.79 KB | ||||
ECON 101-001 | Intermed Microeconomics | George J Mailath | TR 10:30 AM-12:00 PM | Theories of consumer behavior, demand, production, costs, the firm in various market contexts, factor employment, factor incomes, elementary general equilibrium, and welfare. Prerequisite: Incoming freshman wih AP or transfer credit. Upper classmen must have at least a B+ in MATH 104 to take ECON 101 or MATH 114 or MATH 115 concurrently. | Crse Online: Sync & Async Components Registration also required for Recitation (see below) |
Syllabus-101-2021A.pdf102.45 KB | https://pennintouchdaemon.apps.upenn.edu/pennInTouchProdDaemon/jsp/fast.do?webService=syllabus&term=2021A&course=ECON101001 | ||||
ECON 102-001 | Intermed Macroeconomics | Guillermo L Ordonez | TR 01:30 PM-03:00 PM | Facts and theories about the determination of per capita income and its differences across countries and across time. The study of economic fluctuations in output and employment. The role of government in influencing these aggregate variables: monetary and fiscal policy. FNCE 101 does not satisfy any of the Economics department requirements. Therefore, students are required to take ECON 102. | Crse Online: Sync & Async Components Registration also required for Recitation (see below) |
https://pennintouchdaemon.apps.upenn.edu/pennInTouchProdDaemon/jsp/fast.do?webService=syllabus&term=2021A&course=ECON102001 | |||||
ECON 103-001 | Stat For Economists | Wayne Gao | TR 12:00 PM-01:30 PM | This course focuses on data description, probability, and statistics, as relevant for economics. Topics include economic data sources, descriptive statistics, probability distributions and moments, and sampling and sample moments, building to a thorough introduction to linear regression. Focus is on both theoretical and practical issues involved in the substantive interpretation of economic data using econometric techniques. Empirical case studies are discussed throughout, and students are required to perform several econometric analyses in a modern environment such as R. One-term course offered both terms. Notes: Intended primarily for economics majors. ECON 103 cannot be taken by any student who has already completed Statistics at the level of STAT 430 (including the sequence STAT 430 and 431). Such students must take an additional 200-level course to satisfy course requirements of the major. | College Quantitative Data Analysis Req. | Crse Online: Sync & Async Components Registration also required for Recitation (see below) |
ECON103_S21.pdf81.71 KB | https://pennintouchdaemon.apps.upenn.edu/pennInTouchProdDaemon/jsp/fast.do?webService=syllabus&term=2021A&course=ECON103001 | |||
ECON 104-001 | Econometrics | John Lazarev | TR 09:00 AM-10:30 AM | This course focuses on econometric techniques and their application in economic analysis and decision-making, building on ECON 103 to incorporate the many regression complications that routinely occur in econometric environments. Micro-econometric complications include nonlinearity, non-normality, heteroskedasticity, limited dependent variables of various sorts, endogeneity and instrumental variables, and panel data. Macro-econometric topics include trend, seasonality, serial correlation, lagged dependent variables, structural change, dynamic heteroskedasticity, and optimal prediction. Students are required to perform several econometric analyses in a modern environment such as R. One-term course offered both terms. | College Quantitative Data Analysis Req. | Crse Online: Sync & Async Components Registration also required for Recitation (see below) |
Econ104-S21-Syllabus_0.pdf103.26 KB | https://pennintouchdaemon.apps.upenn.edu/pennInTouchProdDaemon/jsp/fast.do?webService=syllabus&term=2021A&course=ECON104001 | |||
ECON 212-001 | Game Theory | John Lazarev | TR 01:30 PM-03:00 PM | An introduction to game theory and its applications to economic analysis. The course will provide a theoretical overview of modern game theory, emphasizing common themes in the analysis of strategic behavior in different social science contexts. The economic applications will be drawn from different areas including trade, corporate strategy and public policy. Any 200-level LPS course when offered, WILL NOT count for Economics Majors unless you are officially registered as an LPS students. | Crse Online: Sync & Async Components | Econ212-S21-Syllabus_0.pdf93.8 KB | https://pennintouchdaemon.apps.upenn.edu/pennInTouchProdDaemon/jsp/fast.do?webService=syllabus&term=2021A&course=ECON212001 | ||||
ECON 224-001 | Stat Learn & Causal Inf | Karun Adusumilli | MW 02:00 PM-03:30 PM | This course covers econometric methods, machine learning methods, and their interface, focusing on aspects of estimation, inference, and prediction in causal and non-causal environments. Topics may include Bayesian learning; recursive estimation and optimal filtering; randomized controlled trials and their approximation; latent variables; classification; topic analysis; LDA models; neural networks; random forests; regularization (shrinkage, selection, ...); network estimation and description. | Crse Online: Sync & Async Components | Syllabus_3.pdf146.11 KB | https://pennintouchdaemon.apps.upenn.edu/pennInTouchProdDaemon/jsp/fast.do?webService=syllabus&term=2021A&course=ECON224001 | ||||
ECON 231-001 | Public Finance | Margaux Luflade | TR 10:30 AM-12:00 PM | This course has two parts. The first looks at market and government failures and discusses the need for public policies as well as limits to their effectiveness including the evaluation of public projects using cost benefit analysis. The second part focuses on the economic analysis of taxation, including the economic incidence and efficiency of taxes. Prerequisite: Credit cannot be received for both ECON 030 and 231. ECON 103 recommended. | Permission Needed From Instructor Crse Online: Sync & Async Components |
Econ231_Syllabus_2021spring.pdf246.16 KB | https://pennintouchdaemon.apps.upenn.edu/pennInTouchProdDaemon/jsp/fast.do?webService=syllabus&term=2021A&course=ECON231001 | ||||
ECON 233-001 | Labor Economics | Andrew J Shephard | MW 02:00 PM-03:30 PM | Labor supply and labor demand, income distribution, labor market contracts and work incentives, human capital, labor market discrimination, job training and unemployment. Prerequisite: Credit cannot be received for both ECON 033 and 233. ECON 103 is recommended. | Permission Needed From Instructor Crse Online: Sync & Async Components |
econ233_syllabus (1).pdf62.26 KB | https://pennintouchdaemon.apps.upenn.edu/pennInTouchProdDaemon/jsp/fast.do?webService=syllabus&term=2021A&course=ECON233001 | ||||
ECON 239-001 | The Digital Economy | Juan C Castillo Hernandez | TR 01:30 PM-03:00 PM | This is an advanced undergraduate course on the digital economy. Our two main goals are (a) to understand how people and companies interact in digital markets and (b) to understand how digital markets should be designed. The course uses a combination of theoretical modeling and empirical evidence in order to achieve those goals. We analyze some key features that are prevalent in digital markets, including network effects, two-sided markets, search and matching, reputation systems, and the use of data. We also zoom in on individual markets, such as search engines, e-commerce platforms, and the gig economy. | Crse Online: Sync & Async Components | Syllabus_2.pdf119.65 KB | https://pennintouchdaemon.apps.upenn.edu/pennInTouchProdDaemon/jsp/fast.do?webService=syllabus&term=2021A&course=ECON239001 | ||||
ECON 242-001 | Topics: Macroeconomics | Jeremy Greenwood | MW 02:00 PM-03:30 PM | This course covers topics of interest in macroeconomics. Two sections are offered: Markets with Frictions. This course studies allocations in markets with frictions, as described by the difficulty in finding a trading partner, private information problems, commitment issues, and so on. Applications to labor markets, monetary economics, the marriage market will be discused. The main technical tool will be search theory, but a liberal amount of calculus and other mathematics will be used. Numerical Methods for Macroeconmists. This course will study some of the numerical methods that are used in modern macroeconomics. This class will learn how to solve nonlinear equations, difference equations, interpolate functions, smooth data, and conduct Monte Carlo simulations on the computer. This will be done while studying economic problems, such as the determination of labor supply, economic growth and business cycle analysis. Calculus is an integral part of the course and some elementary probability theory will be drawn upon. The MATLAB programming language will be used. | Crse Online: Sync & Async Components | 242rd21.pdf48.95 KB | https://pennintouchdaemon.apps.upenn.edu/pennInTouchProdDaemon/jsp/fast.do?webService=syllabus&term=2021A&course=ECON242001 | ||||
ECON 244-001 | Macro-Modeling | Jose-Victor Rios-Rull | MW 02:00 PM-03:30 PM | This is an advanced undergraduate course in models of economic growth. Students will be introduced to the workhorse theoretical models that are used to understand growth by modern macroeconomic researchers and policy makers. The types of questions that we will address include: Why are some countries richer than others? Why do some countries grow quickly while others stagnate? Why did modern economic growth start in Western Europe? What can governments do to accelerate economic growth? How does economic growth interact with demographic and geographic factors? We will build theoretical models that can be used to answer these questions. There will be a strong focus on emphasizing the microeconomic foundations of models, and using the language of mathematics to express the underlying assumptions and assess their implications for policy. Hence, there are strict mathematical prerequisites. We will also compare the predictions of our models with the data. Thus, a fair amount of econometrics will be required. A class in statistics and econometrics is highly recommended. Prerequisite: ECON 103 is recommended. | Crse Online: Sync & Async Components | https://pennintouchdaemon.apps.upenn.edu/pennInTouchProdDaemon/jsp/fast.do?webService=syllabus&term=2021A&course=ECON244001 | |||||
ECON 246-001 | Money and Banking | Guillermo L Ordonez | TR 10:30 AM-12:00 PM | Money and Banking. This course studies the role that financial markets, institutions, and money play in resource allocation. Financial intermediation and the role of banks in the economic system are analyzed and the economic rationale behind banking regulation is studies. The course examines how monetary policy influences interest rates and asset markets, such as the bond market and the stock market. Finally, the instruments and goals of monetary policy are discussed, focusing in particular on credibility and commitment for central banks. All of the questions are explored analytically, using the tools of economic theory. | Crse Online: Sync & Async Components | https://pennintouchdaemon.apps.upenn.edu/pennInTouchProdDaemon/jsp/fast.do?webService=syllabus&term=2021A&course=ECON246001 | |||||
ECON 251-001 | International Trade | Iourii Manovskii | TR 10:30 AM-12:00 PM | Structure of the world economy; theory of international trade; economic growth and international trade; international trade policy: developed countries; developing countries. Direct investment, technology transfers, and the multinational firm. Prerequisite: In addition, the LPS 200-level course, when offered, WILL NOT count for Economics Majors unless you are officially registered as an LP student. | Crse Online: Sync & Async Components | https://pennintouchdaemon.apps.upenn.edu/pennInTouchProdDaemon/jsp/fast.do?webService=syllabus&term=2021A&course=ECON251001 | |||||
ECON 262-001 | Market Design | Amit K Gandhi | TR 01:30 PM-03:00 PM | Market design is broadly about designing interventions in economic systems so as to enhance their performance. The power and potential of market design has recently entered a new era of possibility with the rise of Artificial Intelligence. Artificial Intelligence is concerned with the design of intelligent autonomous systems. Such systems are rapidly transforming our society and economy and have been enabled by major advances in cloud computing and network telecommunications. Yet underlying the technological surface of many AI-oriented applications are fundamental economic and econometric principles which are central to their design and implementation. In short, to perform well, an AI system must "think like economists" - it must: 1. Make predictions about its environment; 2. Test causal hypotheses about the effect of various actions they can take, and; 3. Make decisions about an optimal plan of action in the face of uncertainty, which is a cycle that repeats and iteratively improves. Many of the established success stories in AI today have largely been focused on achieving (1), the trend is towards AI increasingly encompassing (2) and (3). In this course we aim to isolate these economic principles and understand their role in the modern development of AI, as well as gaining an appreciation for what the proliferation of AI based technologies means for the economy in which we live. Although the course will be principally interested in the former, we won't fully shy away from some discussion of the latter. Topics include human judgment and decision making biases (a light intro to behavioral economics), predictive machine learning and regularization, causal inference as distinct from prediction with application to product pricing, and reinforcement learning for dynamic decisions. Prerequisite: The LPS 200-level evening course (Section 601), when offered, WILL NOT count for Economics Majors unless you are officially registered as a LPS student. | Crse Online: Sync & Async Components | https://pennintouchdaemon.apps.upenn.edu/pennInTouchProdDaemon/jsp/fast.do?webService=syllabus&term=2021A&course=ECON262001 | |||||
ECON 273-001 | Pol. Econ Early America | Jesus Fernandez-Villaverde Fernando Arteaga |
TR 10:30 AM-12:00 PM | This course will study the political economy of Early America, from the British Settlement to c. 1820. In particular, we will explore the forces behind the economic growth of the British colonies, the economic forces behind the Revolution, the economic consequences of the Revolution, the political economy of the constitutional convention and ratification, the role of SCOTUS in creating a national market, and the opposing Hamilton-Jefferson views of an American economy. Early America is a fascinating and rich historical period, and we will need to skip many issues of interest. Nevertheless, we hope to provide you with a good overview of how a group of small peripheral colonies created an institutional arrangement that allowed them, in less than two centuries, to become the biggest economy in the world. | Permission Needed From Instructor Crse Online: Sync & Async Components |
||||||
ECON 274-001 | History of Econ. Thought | Fernando Arteaga | TR 01:30 PM-03:00 PM | This course surveys the history of the development of economic thought, beginning with the Classical school and the works of Smith, Ricardo, J.S. Mill, Marx and others and continuing to the 20th century thought, including Keynes, Hayek, and Arrow. | Crse Online: Sync & Async Components | https://pennintouchdaemon.apps.upenn.edu/pennInTouchProdDaemon/jsp/fast.do?webService=syllabus&term=2021A&course=ECON274001 | |||||
ECON 300-301 | Honors Seminar | Jere R Behrman | Students prepare an honors thesis in economics over the academic year, supervised by a faculty member of their choice. In both semesters students present their work in progress to the class. Any student intending to do empirical work in the thesis should have completed ECON 103 and ECON 104. Course meets weekly. Required of all honors majors. | Course Online: Asynchronous Format | |||||||
ECON 682-001 | Game Thry & Applications | Kevin He | TR 10:30 AM-12:00 PM | A graduate level introduction to decision making under uncertainty, applied game theory, and information economics. | Crse Online: Sync & Async Components | 682_syllabus_0.pdf142.72 KB | https://pennintouchdaemon.apps.upenn.edu/pennInTouchProdDaemon/jsp/fast.do?webService=syllabus&term=2021A&course=ECON682001 | ||||
ECON 703-001 | Microec Thry II | George J Mailath | TR 01:30 PM-03:00 PM | Game theory, decision making under uncertainty, information economics. Prerequisite: Meeting the department's minimal mathematical requirements, ECON 897 Summer Math Program. | Permission Needed From Department For PhD Students Only Crse Online: Sync & Async Components |
Syllabus-703-21-ver-11-11.pdf78.19 KB | https://pennintouchdaemon.apps.upenn.edu/pennInTouchProdDaemon/jsp/fast.do?webService=syllabus&term=2021A&course=ECON703001 | ||||
ECON 704-001 | Macroec Thry II | Jeremy Greenwood Jose-Victor Rios-Rull |
MW 10:30 AM-12:00 PM | Equilibrium notions in the growth model. Economies with distortions. Incomplete markets. Overlapping generations. Prerequisite: Meeting the Department's minimal mathematical requirements; ECON 700, 701, 703, 897 Summer Math Program. | Permission Needed From Department For PhD Students Only Crse Online: Sync & Async Components |
704rd21.pdf41.28 KB | https://pennintouchdaemon.apps.upenn.edu/pennInTouchProdDaemon/jsp/fast.do?webService=syllabus&term=2021A&course=ECON704001 | ||||
ECON 706-001 | Econometrics II: Methods | Frank Schorfheide | TR 10:30 AM-12:00 PM | Analysis in time and frequency domains, state space representations, Kalman filtering, conditional heteroskedasticity, nonlinear and nonparametric methods for time series, integration, co-integration, numerical and simulation techniques. Prerequisite: Meeting the department's minimal mathematical requirements; ECON 705, 897 Summer Math Program. | Permission Needed From Department For PhD Students Only Crse Online: Sync & Async Components |
Econ706-21A-syllabus.pdf99.53 KB | |||||
ECON 712-001 | Topics in Econometrics | Xu Cheng | MW 02:00 PM-03:30 PM | Topics and prerequisites announced each year. | Non-Majors Need Permission From Department Crse Online: Sync & Async Components |
||||||
ECON 712-002 | Economic Growth | Jeremy Greenwood | M 05:00 PM-08:00 PM | Topics and prerequisites announced each year. | Non-Majors Need Permission From Department Crse Online: Sync & Async Components |
Eco712GREENWOOD.pdf130.33 KB | |||||
ECON 712-003 | Learn, Equilib&Behav Inf: Learning, Equilibrium, and Behavioral Aspects of Information | Kevin He | TR 01:30 PM-03:00 PM | Topics and prerequisites announced each year. | Non-Majors Need Permission From Department Crse Online: Sync & Async Components |
712_syllabus.pdf126.44 KB | https://pennintouchdaemon.apps.upenn.edu/pennInTouchProdDaemon/jsp/fast.do?webService=syllabus&term=2021A&course=ECON712003 | ||||
ECON 712-004 | Macro Financial Markets | Guillermo L Ordonez | T 05:00 PM-08:00 PM | Topics and prerequisites announced each year. | Non-Majors Need Permission From Department Crse Online: Sync & Async Components |
||||||
ECON 712-005 | Topics in Macro | Iourii Manovskii | TR 01:30 PM-03:00 PM | Topics and prerequisites announced each year. | Non-Majors Need Permission From Department Crse Online: Sync & Async Components |
||||||
ECON 712-006 | Labor, Health & Family | Jose-Victor Rios-Rull | M 05:00 PM-08:00 PM | Topics and prerequisites announced each year. | Non-Majors Need Permission From Department For PhD Students Only Crse Online: Sync & Async Components |
https://pennintouchdaemon.apps.upenn.edu/pennInTouchProdDaemon/jsp/fast.do?webService=syllabus&term=2021A&course=ECON712006 | |||||
ECON 712-007 | Topics in Education: Topics in Education | Margaux Luflade | W 05:00 PM-08:00 PM | Topics and prerequisites announced each year. | Non-Majors Need Permission From Department Crse Online: Sync & Async Components |
Econ712_Prospectus_2021spring.pdf102.61 KB | https://pennintouchdaemon.apps.upenn.edu/pennInTouchProdDaemon/jsp/fast.do?webService=syllabus&term=2021A&course=ECON712007 | ||||
ECON 712-008 | Nonpara & Machine Learn: Nonparametric & Machine Learning Methods For Structural Estimation Problems | Amit K Gandhi | TR 10:30 AM-12:00 PM | Topics and prerequisites announced each year. | Non-Majors Need Permission From Department Crse Online: Sync & Async Components |
https://pennintouchdaemon.apps.upenn.edu/pennInTouchProdDaemon/jsp/fast.do?webService=syllabus&term=2021A&course=ECON712008 | |||||
ECON 712-009 | Market Design | Rakesh V Vohra | TR 12:00 PM-01:30 PM | Topics and prerequisites announced each year. | Non-Majors Need Permission From Department Crse Online: Sync & Async Components |
mdsyllabus_0.pdf59.86 KB | |||||
ECON 712-010 | Urban Econ & Pol Econ: Topics in Urban Economics and Political Economy | Holger Wolfgang Sieg | TR 01:30 PM-03:00 PM | Topics and prerequisites announced each year. | Non-Majors Need Permission From Department Crse Online: Sync & Async Components |
out_ppe_s21.pdf60.74 KB | https://pennintouchdaemon.apps.upenn.edu/pennInTouchProdDaemon/jsp/fast.do?webService=syllabus&term=2021A&course=ECON712010 | ||||
ECON 719-301 | Econ Theory Workshop | M 12:00 PM-01:30 PM T 04:00 PM-06:00 PM |
Course Online: Synchronous Format | ||||||||
ECON 722-001 | Econometrics Iv: Adv | Frank Schorfheide | TR 01:30 PM-03:00 PM | Focuses on macro-econometrics. Topics include comparison of Bayesian and frequentist inference in nonstandard settings (e.g. time series models with persistent roots), Bayesian inference in VARS and DSGE models including modern computational tools such as Gibbs sampling, MCMC, Sequential Monte Carlo, particle filtering, etc., and tools for evaluating DSGE models. | Non-Majors Need Permission From Department Crse Online: Sync & Async Components |
econ722s2021.pdf103.81 KB | |||||
ECON 729-301 | Econometrics Wkshop | M 12:00 PM-01:30 PM M 04:00 PM-06:30 PM |
Course Online: Synchronous Format | ||||||||
ECON 749-301 | Montry Econ Workshop | Dirk Krueger | R 12:00 PM-01:30 PM F 12:00 PM-01:30 PM W 03:30 PM-06:00 PM |
Course Online: Synchronous Format | |||||||
ECON 779-301 | Industrial Organization | T 03:30 PM-05:30 PM | Course Online: Asynchronous Format | ||||||||
ECON 789-301 | Appld Micro Theory Wrksp | F 03:30 PM-06:00 PM F 12:00 PM-01:30 PM |
Course Online: Synchronous Format | ||||||||
ECON 792-001 | Economics of Labor | Andrew J Shephard | MW 10:30 AM-12:00 PM | Topics include: Theories of the supply and demand for labor, wage determination, wage differentials, labor market discrimination, unemployment, occupational choice and dynamics of specific labor markets, theory of matching, trade unions. The theory and empirics of human capital accumulation, intertemporal labor supply, search, intergenerational mobility of income and wealth, contracts and bargaining, efficiency wage models, principal/agent models, and signaling models. | Permission Needed From Department Crse Online: Sync & Async Components |
reading_2021.pdf94.79 KB | |||||
ECON 799-301 | Empirical Microeconomics | R 03:30 PM-06:00 PM T 12:00 PM-01:30 PM |
Course Online: Synchronous Format |