Module Identifier EC10610  
Module Title ECONOMIC PRINCIPLES 2  
Academic Year 2004/2005  
Co-ordinator Professor Peter R Midmore  
Semester Semester 2  
Other staff Mr Liam Peter Price, Mr Nicholas Perdikis  
Mutually Exclusive EC10320  
Course delivery Lecture   22 Hours  
  Seminars / Tutorials   5 Hours  
Assessment
Assessment TypeAssessment Length/DetailsProportion
Semester Exam2 Hours  100%
Supplementary Exam2 Hours  100%

Learning outcomes

On successful completion of the module students will understand optimising behaviour by households and firms and the effects of alternative market structures. They will also have analysed the composition of the main macroeconomic aggregates and how they are measured - consumption, saving, foreign economic activity, government spending. They will also gain an appreciation of how taxation and monetary policy can influence economic activity and the nature and causes of unemployment and inflation. They will also be able to relate the impact of changes in macroeconomic activity on the business sector.


Aims

To consolidate students' understanding of the principles underlying economics, using further detailed illustrations from the study of markets and the macroeconomy.

Brief description

This module builds on the fundamental principles underlying microeconomics and macroeconomics introduced to students in the prerequisite module. It develops key analytical concepts and consolidates the skills, knowledge and understanding required to work in management and business from a specialist perspective, for students taking single, major or joint honours Economics, Business Economics and Business Finance.

Content

More on Microeconomics
Consumer Choice
Producer Choice
Different Market Structures
Goods where Consumption is Non-Rival
General Equilibrium and Economic Efficiency

More on Macroeconomics
Personal Consumption
The Monetary System
Government and the Economy
The International Economy and the Domestic Economy

Reading Lists

s
R Frank and B Bernanke (2004) Principles of Economics 2nd edition. McGraw Hill
J Sloman (2000) Economics 4th edition. Prentice Hall

Books
** Recommended Text
N G Mankiw (2004) Principles of Economics 3rd edition. Thomson
K E Case, R C Fair, M Gartner and Heather, K (1999) Economics 2nd edition. Prentice Hall, Europe

Notes

This module is at CQFW Level 4