UNDERGRADUATE CURRICULUM • • • [DIVISION OF ECONOMICS AND BUSINESS]


Within the major, students can choose a special concentration in Global Business or Technology. If students do not choose one of these options, they will complete, by default, the Economics and Business option.

The Division of Economics and Business has a major, minor, and area of special interest. See Academic Programs section for descriptions of the requirements.

Below is a list and descriptions of all the courses that division offers at the undergraduate level.

EBGN201 Principles of Economics
EBGN304 Personal Finance
EBGN305 Financial Accounting
EBGN306 Managerial Accounting
EBGN310 Environmental and Resource
EBGN311 Microeconomics
EBGN312 Macroeconomics
EBGN314 Principles of Management
EBGN315 Business Strategy
EBGN320 Economics and Technology
EBGN321 Engineering Economics
EBGN325 Intro to Ops. Research
EBGN330 Energy Economics
EBGN342 Economic Development
EBGN345 Corporate Finance
EBGN390 Econometrics
EBGN398A Public Finance
EBGN401 History of Economic Thought
EBGN402 Field Session
EBGN409 Mathematical Economics
EBGN411 Intermediate Micro
EBGN412 Intermediate Macro
EBGN437 Regional Economics

EBGN441 International Economics
EBGN443 Public Economics

EBGN445 International Bus Finance
EBGN452 Nonlinear Programming

EBGN455 Linear Programming
EBGN457 Integer Programming
EBGN459 Supply Chain Management
EBGN461 Stochastic Models in Management Science
EBGN470 Environmental Economics
EBGN495 Economic Forecasting
EBGNx99 Independent Study

EGGN498 Inventing, Patenting and Licensing

Click here for Graduate Courses

Key:

F: Fall Semester, S: Spring Semester, s: Summer Session, f: Field Session

*:Offered every other year

Freshman Through Senior Year (EBGN course number depends upon current academic level)

EBGNX98: SPECIAL TOPICS IN ECONOMICS AND BUSINESS (FS)-Pilot course or special topics course. Topics chosen from special interests of instructor(s) and student(s). Usually the course is offered only once.
Prerequisite: Instructor consent. Prerequisites: None. Variable credit: 1 to 6 credit hours.

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EBGNX99: INDEPENDENT STUDY (FS) -Individual research or special problem projects supervised by a faculty member. A student and instructor agree on a subject matter, content, and credit hours. Prerequisite: "Independent Study" form must be completed and submitted to the Registrar. Independent Study can be taken in your freshman, sophomore, junior or senior year. The EBGN number will vary depending upon your undergraduate status.
Prerequisites: None. Variable credit: 1 to 6 credit hours.

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Sophomore Year

EBGN201: PRINCIPLES OF ECONOMICS-(FS) The basic social and economic institutions of market capitalism. Contemporary economic issues. Business organization. Price theory and market structure. Economic analysis of public policies. Discussion of inflation, unemployment, monetary policy and fiscal policy. Students may elect to satisfy the economics core requirement by taking both EBGN311 and EBGN312 instead of this course. Students considering a major in economics are advised to take the EBGN311/312 sequence instead of EBGN201.
Prerequisites: None. 3 hours lecture; 3 semester hours.
Fall 2008 Syllabus

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Junior Year

EBGN304: PERSONAL FINANCE (s) The management of household and personal finances. Overview of financial concepts with special emphasis on their application to issues faced by individuals and households: budget management, taxes, savings, housing and other major acquisitions, borrowing, insurance, investments, meeting retirement goals, and estate planning. Survey of principles and techniques for the management of a household's assets and liabilities. Study of financial institutions and their relationship to households, along with a discussion of financial instruments commonly held by individuals and families.
Prerequisites: None. 3 hours lecture; 3 semester hours.
Summer 2005 Syllabus

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EBGN305: FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING-(FS) Survey and evaluation of balance sheets and income and expense statements, origin and purpose. Evaluation of depreciation, depletion, and reserve methods for tax and internal management purposes. Cash flow analysis in relation to planning and decision-making. Inventory methods and cost controls related to dynamics of production and processing.
Prerequisites: None. 3 hours lecture; 3 semester hours. (Business elective)
Fall 2008 Syllabus
Topics Covered

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EBGN306: MANAGERIAL ACCOUNTING-(S) Introduction to cost concepts and principles of management accounting including cost accounting. The course focuses on activities that create value for customers and owners of a company and demonstrates how to generate cost-accounting information to be used in management decision-making. Prerequisite: EBGN305. (Business elective)3 hours lecture; 3 semester hours.
Spring 2008 Syllabus
Spring 2008 Part 2 Syllabus
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EBGN310: ENVIRONMENTAL AND RESOURCE ECONOMICS (F) Application of microeconomic theory to topics in environmental and resource economics. Topics include analysis of pollution control, benefit/cost analysis in decision-making and the associated problems of measuring benefits and costs, non-renewable resource extraction, measures of resource scarcity, renewable resource management, environmental justice, sustainability, and the analysis of environmental regulations and resource policies.
Prerequisite: EBGN201 or EBGN311. 3 hours lecture; 3 semester hours.
Fall 2008 Syllabus
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EBGN311: MICROECONOMICS-(FSs) How markets for goods and services work. Economic behavior of consumers, businesses, and government. Market structure and pricing. Efficiency and equity. Public policies. Students may satisfy the economics core requirement by taking the EBGN311/312 sequence instead of EBGN201. Students considering a major in economics are advised to take the EBGN311/312 sequence.

Prerequisites: None. 3 hours lecture; 3 semester hours. (Major core course)

Fall 2008 Syllabus
Topics Covered

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EBGN312: MACROECONOMICS-(FSs) Analysis of gross domestic output and cyclical variability, plus the general level of prices and employment. The relationship between output and financial markets that affects the level of economic activity. Evaluation of government institutions and policy options for stabilization and growth. International trade and balance of payments. Students may satisfy the economics core requirement by taking the EBGN311/312 sequence instead of EBGN211. Students considering a major in economics are advised to take the EBGN311/312 sequence.

Prerequisites: None. 3 hours lecture; 3 semester hours. (Major core course)

Fall 2008 Syllabus
Topics to be covered

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EBGN314: PRINCIPLES OF MANAGEMENT-(S) Introduction of underlying principles, fundamentals, and knowledge required of the manager in a complex, modern organization. Prerequisites: None. 3 hours lecture; 3 semester hours.(Business elective)

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EBGN315: BUSINESS STRATEGY-(F) An introduction to game theory and industrial organization (IO) principles at a practical and applied level. Topics include economies of scale and scope, the economics of the make-versus-buy decision, market structure and entry, dynamic pricing rivalry, strategic positioning, and the economics of organizational design.
Prerequisite: EBGN311. 3 hours lecture; 3 semester hours.
Spring 2006 Syllabus

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EBGN320: ECONOMICS AND TECHNOLOGY-(S) The theoretical, empirical and policy aspects of the economics of technology and technological change. Topics include the economics of research and development, inventions and patenting, the Internet, e-commerce, and incentives for efficient implementation of technology.
Prerequisites: EBGN 311. EBGN 312 is recommended but not required. 3 hours lecture; 3 semester hours.

Fall 2008 Syllabus

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EBGN321 (CHGN321): ENGINEERING ECONOMICS-(S) (Formerly EBGN421) Time value of money concepts of present, future and annual worth, rate of return, net present value, ratios and break-even analysis applied to after-tax economic analysis of mineral, petroleum and general investments. Related topics on proper handling of (1) inflation and escalation, (2) leverage (borrowed money), (3) risk adjustment of analyses using expected value concepts, (4) mutually exclusive alternative analyses and service producing alternatives.
Prerequisites: None. 3 hours lecture; 3 semester hours. (Major core course)
Spring 2008 Syllabus

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EBGN325: OPERATIONS RESEARCH-(F)This survey course introduces fundamental operations research techniques in the optimization areas of linear programming, network models (i.e., maximum flow, shortest part, and minimum cost flow), integer programming, and nonlinear programming. Stochastic (probabilistic) topics include queuing theory and simulation. Inventory models are discussed as time permits. The emphasis in this applications course is on problem formulation and obtaining solutions using Excel Software.
Prerequisite: Junior Standing, MACS112. 3 hours lecture; 3 semester hours.
Fall 2008 Syllabus

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EBGN330: ENERGY ECONOMICS-(F) (Formerly EBGN430) Study of economic theories of optimal resource extraction, market power, market failure, regulation deregulation, technological change and resource scarcity. Economic tools used to analyze OPEC, energy mergers, natural gas price controls and deregulation, electric utility restructuring, energy taxes, environmental impacts of energy use, government R&D programs, and other energy topics.
Prerequisites: EBGN201 or EBGN311. 3 hours lecture; 3 semester hours. (Public Policy Elective)
Fall 2008 Syllabus

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EBGN342: ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT-(*S) (Formerly EBGN442) Theories of development and underdevelopment. Sectoral development policies and industrialization. The special problems and opportunities created by an extensive mineral endowment, including the Dutch disease and the resource-curse argument. The effect of value-added processing and export diversification on development.
Prerequisite: EBGN311. 3 lecture hours; 3 semester hours. Offered alternate years. (Public Policy Elective)
Spring 2008 Syllabus
Outline 2008

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EBGN345: PRINCIPALS OF CORPORATE FINANCE-(S) Introduction to corporate finance, financial management, and financial markets. Time value of money and discounted cash flow valuation. Risk and returns. Interest rates. Bond and stock valuation. Capital budgeting and financing decisions. Introduction to financial engineering and financial risk management, derivatives, and hedging with derivatives.
Prerequisite: EBGN305. 3 hours lecture; 3 semester hours. (Business Elective)
Spring 2008 Syllabus
Topics Covered

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EBGN390: ECONOMETRICS-(I) (WI) Introduction to econometrics, including ordinary least-squares and single equation models; two-stage least-squares and multiple equation models; specification error, serial correlation, heteroskedasticity, and other problems; distributive-lag models and other extensions, hypothesis testing and forecasting applications.
Prerequisite: EBGN311, MATH323. 3 hours lecture; 3 semester hours.
Fall 2008 Syllabus

EBGN398A Public Finance -
Fall 2007 Syllabus

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Senior Year

EBGN401: HISTORY OF ECONOMIC THOUGHT-(S) Study of the evolution of economic thinking since the 18th century. Topics include Adam Smith and the Classical School, Karl Marx and Socialism, Alfred Marshall and the Neoclassical School, John Maynard Keynes and the Keynesian School, and Milton Friedman and the New Classicism.
Prerequisites: EBGN311 and EBGN312. 3 hours lecture; 3 semester hours.
Spring 2007 Syllabus

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EBGN402: FIELD SESSION-(S) (WI) An applied course for students majoring in economics. The field session may consist of either participation in a computer simulation or an independent research project under the supervision of a faculty member. In the computer simulation, students work as part of the senior executive team of a company and are responsible for developing and executing a strategy for their company with onging decisions on everything from new product development, to marketing, to finance and accounting.
Prerequisites: EBGN 411 and EBGN 412; or permission of the instructor. 3 semester hours.
Summer 2008 Syllabus

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EBGN409: MATHEMATICAL ECONOMICS-(S)The course applies mathematical tools to economic problems. It covers the mathematics needed to read published economic literature and to do advanced work in economics. It includes topics from differential and integral calculus, matrix algebra, differential equations, and dynamic programming. Applications are taken from mineral, energy, and environmental issues, requiring both analytical and computer solutions using such programs as GAMS and MATHEMATICA.
Prerequisites: MATH 112, EBGN411, EBGN412, MATH332 or MATH348, or permission of instructor. 3 hours lecture; 3 semester hours. (General elective)
Spring 2008 Syllabus

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EBGN411: INTERMEDIATE MICROECONOMICS-(FS) A second course in microeconomics. Compared to the earlier course, this course is more rigorous mathematically and quantitatively. It also places more emphasis on advanced topics such as game theory, risk and uncertainty, property rights, and external costs and benefits.
Prerequisites: EBGN311, and MATH213. (Major core course) 3 hours lecture; 3 semester hours.
Fall 2008 Syllabus

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EBGN412: INTERMEDIATE MACROECONOMICS-(FS) Intermediate macroeconomics provides a foundation for analyzing the long run and short-run effects of fiscal and monetary policy on aggregate economic performance. Special emphasis on interactions between the foreign sector and the domestic economy. Analytical models are developed from the important schools of thought: Classical, Keynesian, and New Classical.
Prerequisite: EBGN311, EBGN312 and MATH213. (Major core course) 3 hours lecture; 3 semester hours.
Fall 2008 Syllabus

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EBGN437A REGIONAL ECONOMICS (F) Analysis of the spatial dimension of economics and economic decisions. Interregional capital and labor mobility. Location decisions of firms and households. Agglomeration economies. Models of regional economic growth. measuring and forecasting economic impast and regional growth. Local and regional economic development policy. Urban and regional spatial structure. Emphasis on application of tools and techniques of regional analysis.
Prerequisite: EBGN 411. 3 hours lecture, 3 semester hours.
Spring 2008 Syllabus

EBGN441: INTERNATIONAL ECONOMICS-(*S) Theories and determinants of international trade, including static and dynamic comparative advantage and the gains from trade. The history of arguments for and against free trade. The political economy of trade policy in both developing and developed countries.
Prerequisite: EBGN411. (Public Policy Elective) 3 hours lecture; 3 semester hours. Offered alternate years.
Spring 2008 Syllabus

EBGN443: PUBLIC ECONOMICS- This course covers public-sector economics, including the fundamental institutions and relationships between the government and private decision makers. It covers the fundamental general equilibrium welfare theorems and their interaction with government policy instruments that affect efficiency and distribution. Normative topics include an intensive study of the causes and consequences of, and policy prescriptions for, market failure due to public goods, or other problems associated with externalities and income distribution. Positive analysis focuses on policy formation in the context of political-economy and public choice theories. Prerequisite: EBGN 411. 3 hours lecture, 3 semester hours.

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EBGN445: INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS FINANCE- (S) An introduction to financial issues of critical importance to multinational firms. Overview of international financial markets. The international monetary system. Foreign exchange markets. International parity conditions, exchange rate-forecasting, swaps and swap markets. International investments. Foreign-direct investment. Corporate strategy. The international debt crisis. Prerequisite: EBGN305, EBGN 411, and EBGN 412. (Business elective) 3 hours lecture; 3 semester hours.

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EBGN452: NONLINEAR PROGRAMMING -
As an advanced course in optimization, this course will address both unconstrained and constrained nonlinear model formulation and corresponding algorithms, e.g., gradient search and Newton's method, Lagrange multiplier methods and reduced gradient algorithms. Applications of state-of-the-art hardware and software will emphasize solving real-world problems in areas such as mining, energy, transportation and the military.  Prerequisites:  EBGN455 or consent of instructor.  3 hours lecture; 3 semester hours.

EBGN455: LINEAR PROGRAMMING-(F)- This course addresses the formulation of linear programming models, examines linear programs in two dimensions, covers standard form and other basics essential to understanding the Simplex method, the Simplex method itself, duality theory, complementary slackness conditions, and sensitivity analysis. As time permits, multiobjective programming, basic linear integer programming, and the interior point method are introduced. Application of linear programming models discussed in this course include, but are not limited to, the areas of manufacturing, finance, energy, mining, transportation and logistics, and the military.
Prerequisites: MATH332 or MATH348 or EBGN409 or permission of instructor. 3 hours lecture; 3 semester hours.
Fall 2008 Syllabus

EBGN457: Integer Programming
As an advanced course in optimization, this course will address computational performance of linear and linear-integer optimization problems, and, using state-of-the-art hardware and software, will introduce solution techniques for “difficult” optimization problems. We will discuss such methodologies applied to the monolith, e.g., branch-and-bound and its variations, cutting planes, strong formulations, as well as decomposition and reformulation techniques, e.g., Lagrangian relaxation, Benders decomposition, column generation.  Additional special topics may be introduced as time permits. Prerequisites:  EBGN455 or consent of instructor.  3 hours lecture; 3 semester hours.

EBGN459: Supply Chain Management
As a quantitative managerial course, the course will explore how firms can better organize their operations so that they more effectively align their supply with the demand for their products and services. Supply Chain Management (SCM) is concerned with the efficient integration of suppliers, factories, warehouses and retail-stores (or other forms of distribution channels) so that products are provided to customers in the right quantity and at the right time. Topics include managing economies of scale for functional products, managing market-mediation costs for innovative products, make-to order versus make-to-stock systems, quick response strategies, risk pooling strategies, supply-chain contracts and revenue management. Additional “special topics” will also be introduced, such as reverse logistics issues in the supply-chain or contemporary operational and financial hedging strategies. Prerequisites: consent of the instructor. 3 hours lecture; 3 semester hours.

EBGN461: Stochastic Models in Management Science
As a quantitative managerial course, the course is an introduction to the use of probability models for analyzing risks and economic decisions and doing performance analysis for dynamic systems. The difficulties of making decisions under uncertainty are familiar to everyone. We will learn models that help us quantitatively analyze uncertainty and how to use related software packages for managerial decision-making and to do optimization under uncertainty. Illustrative examples will be drawn from many fields including marketing, finance, production, logistics and distribution, energy and mining. The main focus of the course is to see methodologies that help to quantify the dynamic relationships of sequences of "random” events that evolve over time.  Prerequisites: consent of the instructor. 3 hours lecture; 3 semester hours.

EBGN470: ENVIRONMENTAL ECONOMICS- This course considers the role of markets as they relate to the environoment. Topics discussed include environmental policy and economic incentives, market and non-market approaches to pollution regulation, property rights and the environment, the use of benefit/cost analysis in environmental policy decisions, and methods for measuring environmental and non-market values. prerequisite: EBGN 411. 3 hours lecture, 3 semester hours.

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EBGN495 ECONOMIC FORECASTING-(F) An introduction to the methods employed in business and econometric forecasting. Topics include time series modeling, Box-Jenkins models, vector autoregression, cointegration, exponential smoothing and seasonal adjustments. Covers data collection methods, graphing, model building, model interpretation, and presentation of results. Topics include demand and sales forecasting, the use of anticipations data, leading indicators and scenario analysis, business cycle forecasting, GNP, stock market prices and commodity market prices. Includes discussion of links between economic forecasting and government policy.
Prerequisites:EBGN 390, EBGN411, EBGN412. 3 hours lecture; 3 semester hours.

 

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