Introduction to Economics (Winter 2024)
Economics is the study of how society allocates scarce resources to the production and consumption of goods and services. In this class you will learn a new set of tools to use in personal, business, and political decision making. You will learn to think like an economist, which will not only help you make rational decisions, but also assist you in viewing and understanding the world around you. While we discuss individual and firm behavior in a specific context, you will learn to understand production and sales very broadly. This will help you relate the principles that guide production and sales decisions to a wide variety of social, political, and economic issues around us. This also allows us to capture the subjective and intangible costs and benefits individuals face in making decisions every day, and makes economics relevant for the study of poverty, development, and overall human well-being.
Course Materials
Course Calendar
January 16
January 18
January 23
- Units 1 and 2 continued
- Unit 3 Lecture Notes
- Practice Problems from Unit 1 (in-class)
- Practice Problems from Unit 1 (extra problems)
- Practice Problems from Unit 2 (in-class)
- Practice Problems from Unit 2 (extra problems)
January 25
- Unit 3 continued
January 30
February 6
- Unit 7 continued
February 8
- Unit 8 Lecture Notes
- Practice Problems from Units 7 and 8 (extra problems. For password use the same format for extra problems, use Unit 7 where you put Unit number)
February 22
March 5
- Units 11 and 12 Lecture Notes (use password associated with Unit 12)
March 7
- Units 11 and 12 (continued)
March 12
March 14
March 19
- Unit 13
March 21
- Unit 14 (class notes only)
March 26
- Special Topic related to lending, borrowing, foreign exchange market, and international trade
- Fiscal Stimulus article (no password required)
March 28
- Special topic continued
April 2