Title Instructors Location Time Description Cross listings Fulfills Registration notes Syllabus Syllabus URL
ECON 001-910 Intro To Microeconmics Dohan Kim 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: Asynchronous Format [ECON001_910] Summer21_Syllabus_ver_2021_05_21.pdf58.44 KB
ECON 001-920 Intro To Microeconomics David Mao MTWRF 01:00 PM-02:45 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 mao_syllabus_053021.pdf149.57 KB https://pennintouchdaemon.apps.upenn.edu/pennInTouchProdDaemon/jsp/fast.do?webService=syllabus&term=2021B&course=ECON001920
ECON 001-921 Intro To Microeconomics Juan Pablo Sagredo 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: Asynchronous Format ECON-001-921Syllabus.pdf121.17 KB
ECON 002-910 Intro To Macroeconomics Collum Eleazer Freedman 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: Asynchronous Format ECON 002 Summer 2021 Syllabus.pdf100.05 KB https://pennintouchdaemon.apps.upenn.edu/pennInTouchProdDaemon/jsp/fast.do?webService=syllabus&term=2021B&course=ECON002910
ECON 002-920 Intro To Macroeconomics Justin Franco Lam MTWRF 01:00 PM-02:45 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 LPS_Summer_ECON_002_920__Intro_to_Macroeconomics_Syllabus_0.pdf91.39 KB https://pennintouchdaemon.apps.upenn.edu/pennInTouchProdDaemon/jsp/fast.do?webService=syllabus&term=2021B&course=ECON002920
ECON 101-910 Intermed Microeconomics Cesar Diego Urquizo Ubillus CANCELED 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. Course Online: Synchronous Format
ECON 101-920 Intermed Microeconomics Ryan Douglas Zalla 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. Course Online: Asynchronous Format Econ_101_920_Syllabus_2021.pdf103.83 KB
ECON 103-910 Statistics For Economists Daniel Jaar 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. Course Online: Asynchronous Format Syllabus_4.pdf71.47 KB
ECON 104-920 Econometrics 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. Course Online: Asynchronous Format CourseSyllabus.pdf131.6 KB https://pennintouchdaemon.apps.upenn.edu/pennInTouchProdDaemon/jsp/fast.do?webService=syllabus&term=2021B&course=ECON104920
ECON 212-910 Game Theory Isaac Jonathan Rabbani 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. Course Online: Asynchronous Format Syllabus (1).pdf161.71 KB https://pennintouchdaemon.apps.upenn.edu/pennInTouchProdDaemon/jsp/fast.do?webService=syllabus&term=2021B&course=ECON212910