ECO Economics CoursesSSC199Y1
Undergraduate seminar that focuses on specific ideas, questions, phenomena or controversies, taught by a regular Faculty member deeply engaged in the discipline. Open only to newly admitted first year students. It may serve as a distribution requirement course; see page 44. ECO100Y1
An introduction to economic analysis and its applications: price determination; the role of competition; international trade and finance; the theory of production and employment; the role of money and the banking system; monetary and fiscal policy. NOTE graphical and quantitative analysis are used extensively. ECO105Y1
An introduction to the principles and methods of economics. Lecture topics include: economic growth, the importance of productivity, international trade, competitive markets, macroeconomic issues and more specific topics such as rent controls, OPEC, the international debt crisis, trade restrictions, the national debt and sustainable development. Students who intend to complete a minor, major, or specialist program in Economics are advised to take ECO100Y1. ECO200Y1
Theory of markets and prices. Determination of prices through the interaction of the basic economic units, the household as consumer and as supplier of inputs and the business firm as producer and as employer of inputs. The pricing system as the mechanism by which social decisions are made in a market economy. ECO201Y1
The development of the west European economy from the apogee of the Commercial Revolution era and the ensuing economic crises of the later - early 14th centuries to the eve of the modern Industrial Revolution, focusing on Italy, Spain, Portugal, France, Germany, the Low Countries and England. Major topics: feudalism, serfdom and other barriers to economic growth; demographic, monetary and other macroeconomic forces; the development of market economies; structural changes in and interactions among the agrarian, commercial, financial, and industrial sectors; overseas expansion and colonization; the role of Church, state, warfare, and social/political institutions; Mercantilism. ECO202Y1
Theory of output, employment and the price level; techniques for achieving economic stability; central banking and Canadian financial institutions and markets; foreign exchange markets and the exchange rate. ECO206Y1
This course deals more rigorously and more mathematically with the topics included in ECO200Y1 and is intended primarily for students in certain Specialist programs. ECO208Y1
This course deals more rigorously and more mathematically with the topics included in ECO 202Y1 and is intended primarily for students in certain Specialist programs. ECO210H1
An introduction to mathematical methods commonly used in economic theory. Topics include unconstrained multivariate optimization, multivariate optimization subject to equality or inequality constraints, difference and differential equations. ECO220Y1
Statistical analysis; elementary probability theory, sampling distributions, tests of hypotheses, estimation and multiple regression analysis. Applications in economic and business problems. Elementary calculus and matrix algebra are used. ECO227Y1
This course deals more rigorously with the topics included in ECO 220Y1 and is intended primarily for students in certain Specialist programs and other students planning to take ECO 327Y1/357Y1. ECO230Y1
The key concepts of international trade are reviewed with an eye to understanding contemporary trade issues and recommending policy initiatives. Attention is given to empirical assessment of alternative trade theories and to broader international relations issues. ECO236H1
Analysis of selected current policy issues using the tools of public economics. Topics may include economics of selected expenditure areas (health, education, welfare), federal-provincial fiscal relations (transfers, allocation of taxes); aspects of tax policy at all levels of government (income, sales, property taxes); public pensions. ECO239Y1
Application of economic analysis to current issues in labour policy: immigration, retirement, education, unemployment, earnings differentials, employment and pay equity, labour unions, minimum wage, income policies. WDW244H1
(See Woodsworth College) ECO250Y1/251H1/252H1
A seminar may be offered in a different subject each year. Students require permission of the instructor in addition to the minimum prerequisite published for each seminar. (See the Undergraduate Secretary for details) ECO302Y1
Market and non-market types of economic institutions. Diverse ways of organizing factors of production: land, labour, and capital in primitive, ancient and modern societies. Special attention to the work of Karl Polanyi in this area. ECO303Y1
The economic development of modern Europe, focusing on urban industrialization in the Netherlands, Great Britain, France, Germany, and Russia, up to World War I. Major topics: technological, institutional, and social factors in economic growth; demographic and monetary forces; structural changes in and interactions among the agrarian, commercial, financial, and industrial sectors; international trade and capital flows; the role of the state; the role of economic theory and ideology; theories of post-1850 imperialism. ECO306Y1
U.S. economic history from European settlement to the late 20th century. Interrelationships of the U.S. and world developments, international migration, economic policies, institutions, capital flows and technological transfer. ECO310Y1
Analysis of firm behaviour in imperfectly competitive markets and how well those markets function. The impact of market power; limited information; transaction costs; barriers to entry; strategic behaviour of competitors; externalities and contractual agreements on firm and market performance; evaluation of competition policy and government regulation. MGT310Y1
(See Commerce) ECO312H1
The nature and purpose of economic regulation. The efficiency and equity aspects of the regulation of public utilities. Optimal pricing, rate-of-return regulation, entry and exit limitations, social regulation. Regulatory reform. Institutions of regulation in Canada. ECO313H1
This course demonstrates the way that a rigorous application of microeconomic techniques can inform our responses to various environmental problems. Topics may include: air and water pollution and renewable resource management. ECO314H1
The use of economic tools in analyzing problems of resource management, sharply rising and falling prices for many resources especially energy, embargoes on oil shipments, and the social profitability of energy exports. Development of conservation and the principles of finite resources; world events and Canadian policy within the framework of microeconomic analysis. ECO319H1
Theories of regional economic growth and development. Models of general equilibrium among regions. Regional policy instruments and their interactions across regions. Regional economic unions. Discussion of Canadas economic regions. ECO320H1
The practical application of microeconomic theory to common legal problems: torts, contracts, property and crime, and the limitations of economic analysis. No previous familiarity with the law is assumed. (This is an economic analysis of legal issues, not a course in law.) ECO321Y1
Canadian economic growth and development as viewed through the staples thesis of Harold Innis. Reference to United States economic history throughout the course. ECO323Y1
Development of the Canadian economy; effect on Canada of the development of the United States and of the international economy. ECO324Y1
Economic development theory and policy related to the economic transformation of the developing countries, including industrial and agricultural sector strategies, international trade policy, public sector activities and the importance of productivity growth. ECO325H1
To develop the economic foundations of macroeconomic theory and analytic skills in constructing and solving macroeconomic models. Topics may include: dynamic choice, neoclassical growth theory, uncertainty and rational expectations, business cycles, as well as fiscal and monetary policy. ECO326H1
Game theory and applications. Topics include: consumer and firm strategic decision-making, welfare economics, uncertainty and information, industrial organization. Emphasis on modeling and quantitative analysis. ECO327Y1
The development and application of statistical techniques in estimating economic models and testing economic theory. The implications and treatment of special statistical problems that arise in estimating economic relationships. ECO328Y1
The operation of the international economy and the economic interdependence among nations, in terms of international monetary relationships, commodity trade and factor movements. ECO332H1
This course uses microeconomics to study the behaviour of the family, including marriage, divorce, intra-family allocations, investment in children and gender roles. ECO333Y1
Spatial economic theory and urban public policy: firms and individuals in partial and general equilibrium, land development and land-use controls, urban transportation, efficiency and equity in spending and taxing. ECO334Y1
The operation of the housing and other real estate markets and the markets for real estate finance; the impact of government intervention on income distribution, efficiency, and resource allocation in these markets. ECO335Y1
Introduction to earlier periods; 20th- century China and Japan as case studies in development economics. ECO336Y1
Theory of public goods, externalities, and growth of government: analysis of equity, incidence and incentive effects of taxes. An analytical treatment of the public sector. ECO338H1
Application of microeconomic theory to conceptual and policy issues in education. Topics include the economic benefits and costs of education; investment in human capital and the returns to educational expenditures; the role of government in education; educational financing and planning. ECO339Y1
The operation of labour markets; determinants of supply and demand for labour; wage differentials; discrimination; investment in schooling and training; unemployment; economics of unions. ECO340H1
The personal distribution of income and wealth; distributive justice; measurement of inequality and poverty. The distributional effects of the tax system, government spending, economic regulation (including policies such as pay and employment equity), and macroeconomic policies. ECO342Y1
Economic development of Europe and certain overseas areas, particularly Japan and the East Asian economies. Special attention to globalization before 1914, problems of the interwar years, the Great Depression of the 1930s, the period since 1945, international trade, the balance of payments and exchange rate mechanisms, growth performance of the major industrial countries. ECO350Y1/351H1/352H1Special Topics in Economics 52S/26S
Prerequisite: TBA ECO353Y1/354H1/355H1
A seminar may be offered in a different subject each year. Students require permission of the instructor in addition to the minimum prerequisite published for each seminar. (See the Undergraduate Secretary for details) ECO357Y1
Development and use of statistical techniques in building models economic theory. This course is intended for those planning to take graduate courses in econometrics. ECO358H1
An introduction to economics of financial assets and financial markets. Topics: inter-temporal choice, expected utility theory, security valuation, selected asset pricing models, market efficiency, term structure of interest rates and international foreign exchange rate systems - essential materials for an understanding of the role and operation of financial markets. ECO360Y1
With emphasis on the United States, Japan and Canada, this course examines theories of capitalism; Long Wave Cycle, the importance of productivity growth and Solows residual, the economics of technological change, the Japanese/U.S. trade interface, the economic slowdown since 1973 and the current Canadian productivity challenge. ECO369Y1
The provision of health care provides many special problems of informational asymmetry, regulation, insurance and redistribution. The course considers the demand and supply side problems. Alternative reform proposals for health care are explored. ECO370Y1
An introduction to the economic analysis of organizations and, in particular, the firm. An investigation of how markets can solve the twin problems of coordinating activities and motivating individuals; and, when markets are less successful, how organizations and special contractual relationships emerge as alternative institutions for allocating resources. ECO391Y1
An introduction to economic analysis of new technologies, focussing on biotechnology, software, the internet. An examination of competition in markets where technologies are developed and used; emergence of electronic commerce; impact of intellectual property law and competition policy on innovation; the role of strategic alliances for overcoming coordination problems. JPE400Y1
An integration of economics and political science to explore both the domestic and international obstacles to development in the contemporary Third World and the efficacy of the development strategies actually followed. (Given by the Departments of Economics and Political Science) ECO416H1
The construction and operation of macroeconometric models. The use of models for conducting policy simulations and for generating quantitative forecasts of economic activity. ECO418H1
Problems and methods in the analysis of economic data using economic theory. Specification and estimation of microeconomic relationships and their aggregate counterparts. Examples taken from consumption behaviour, demand systems, investment behaviour, production and cost functions, financial modelling, labour and development economics. ECO419H1
Contemporary issues in international monetary economics and macroeconomic policy formulation in open economies like Canada. A study of forces determining interest rates and exchange rates, inflation and unemployment; analysis of government policy in relation to financial markets. ECO420Y1/421H1/422H1
Seminars or workshops may be offered in one or more subjects each year. Students must meet the prerequisites announced by the Department. (See the Undergraduate Secretary for details.) ECO423H1
Themes are incentives, contracts, and the impetus for change within North America. Topics covered: the staples growth thesis, slavery, indentured servitude, apprenticeships, technical change, the evolution of production, the rise of the factory, fertility and convergence. ECO424H1
Economic analysis of topics in economic development, such as patterns of growth, issues of poverty and inequality, land reform, tax design and price reform. Focus on application of theory, especially statistical analysis relating to conduct of economic policy in developing countries. ECO425H1
A research-oriented course exploring the interrelationships between economics and demographic change, both historical and projected, with attention to the microeconomic foundations, macroeconomic performance, and policy in areas such as fertility, migration, education, labour markets, housing, crime, recreation, leisure, marketing, health, retirement and pensions. The Canadian experience, with some international comparisons. ECO426H1
An examination of selected research on compensation, incentive issues, cooperation and allocation of authority in hierarchical organizations. ECO429Y1
Development of analytical economics from the 18th century with emphasis on Adam Smith, the British Classical School (David Ricardo, T.R. Malthus, and J.S. Mill), Karl Marx, the Marginalists and their successors to 1939. ECO430Y1/431H1
TBA ECO432Y1
This course deals with advanced and contemporary topics in economic theory. Intended for students with considerable interest and competence in Mathematics. ECO451H1
An introduction to modern theories of the determinants of macroeconomic growth that examines the important question of why some countries are rich and others are poor. Topics include: investigation of empirical literature pertaining to international comparisons of recent and past rates of economic growth across countries. ECO452H1
National economic development primarily in Great Britain, France, Germany, and Russia, with focus on industrialization, agricultural change, banking and finance, state economic policies; international trade and factor movements, poverty and income distribution. ECO453Y1
Selected seminar topics in late-medieval, early-modern European economic and social history, including: demography, money and banking, international trade, overseas expansion, regional commerce, industry, agriculture, serfdom, feudal institutions, Church and state, warfare, and economic philosophies. ECO457Y1
Topics vary with the interest and backgrounds of the participants: subjects normally include international monetary arrangements; patterns of international trade, competition and payments; migration and capital flows; imperialism and dependency; international fluctuations; the effects of the world wars on the international economy and the evolution of international economic institutions. ECO458H1
This course blends international trade and industrial organization concepts in examining the cases for government trade policy as well as the case for (or against) regional trade agreements. We examine NAFTA as well as specific sectors. An important part of the course is the individual project presented in class. ECO459H1
The theory and political economy of international trade, with examination of specific trade institutions: Bretton Woods, WTO, NAFTA, tariff administration, most-favoured nation treatment, antidumping regulation, subsidies and countervailing duties, agriculture, trade in services, trade-related intellectual property, trade and environment, trade and developing countries. ECO491H1
Economics of intellectual property (patents, copyrights, trademarks). Analysis of alternative mechanisms for encouraging innovation, especially intellectual property, prizes and contracts; design of intellectual property rights; emergence of private arrangements (licensing, joint ventures, patent pools, mergers) for organizing intellectual assets of research firms. |
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