This course offers a comprehensive exploration of key economic concepts. Topics covered include aggregate demand and supply, measuring national income, inflation, unemployment, the long-run economic perspective, credit markets, and the role of money and the Federal Reserve.
This introductory class covers topics such as data types, graphical methods, descriptive measures, probability, discrete and continuous probability distributions, sampling, and interval estimation. The course explores the tools and concepts essential for making data-driven decisions and understanding statistical analysis in real-world applications.
This class explores the basics of the financial system, including money, the payments system, interest rates, and how these rates are determined. The course covers financial markets, risk structure, stock markets, and market efficiency. It also discusses various financial institutions, such as commercial banks, shadow banks, and nonbank financial institutions. In addition, the course explores monetary policy, with a particular focus on the Federal Reserve and the money supply process.
This course offers a fascinating exploration of economic history, from the impact of the Columbian Exchange to the rise of industrial titans. The class studies the evolution of economic institutions, transportation, and communication, as well as key aspects of income distribution, discrimination, and immigration policies.