Economic Principles FFEC002S4ACB1 ACA Certificate of Higher Education ECONOMICS DEMIC YEAR 2017/2018...

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1 Certificate of Higher Education ECONOMICS ACADEMIC YEAR 2017/2018 MODULE OUTLINE Economic Principles FFEC002S4ACB CLASS DETAILS First Meeting Monday 1 Oct 2018, 6.30-8.30pm (22 Meetings) Term Dates: Term One: 1 October –10 December Term Two: 14 January – 25 March Module taught by Dr Peter Barnes Please be aware that students should not be attending any classes until they have formally enrolled.

Transcript of Economic Principles FFEC002S4ACB1 ACA Certificate of Higher Education ECONOMICS DEMIC YEAR 2017/2018...

1

Certificate of Higher Education ECONOMICS

ACADEMIC YEAR 2017/2018 MODULE OUTLINE

Economic Principles FFEC002S4ACB

CLASS DETAILS

First Meeting Monday 1 Oct 2018, 6.30-8.30pm (22 Meetings)

Term Dates: Term One: 1 October –10 December Term Two: 14 January – 25 March

Module taught by Dr Peter Barnes

Please be aware that students should not be attending any classes until they have formally enrolled.

2

Contents CLASS DETAILS ...................................................................................................................................1 MODULE DESCRIPTION ......................................................................................................................3 COURSEWORK AND ASSESSMENT....................................................................................................4 REFERENCES ......................................................................................................................................5 READING LISTS ...................................................................................................................................6 ESSAYS ................................................................................................................................................9

Please read the Certificate of Higher Education Economics Student Handbook carefully for information and College policies regarding your studies.

3

MODULE DESCRIPTION

An Explanation of basic economic principles is provided, in order to establish a foundation for the understanding of national and International economic issues and policies. You will develop analytical skills and discuss problems of principle and policy.

Aims

• The main aim of the module is to introduce basic economic principles as a foundation for the

understanding and discussion of national and international economic policies and issues. Class members are encouraged to discuss economic issues.

Student Outcomes

By the end of the module you should: • have gained a knowledge and understanding of the key terminology and themes in public policy

debate. • have gained an appreciation of the importance of critical thought and be able to apply basic

principles in the explaining of real world economic behaviour. • be able to think critically and independently about what you have read • have completed and been assessed on your coursework

4

COURSEWORK AND ASSESSMENT

Students will be expected to prepare essays for formal assessment and to undertake a compulsory in-class assessment.

Assessment will consist of three elements:

1. Coursework amounting to 3,000 words in total to be made up of two assignments of 1,500 words each, to be submitted by weeks 10 and 20. These assignments will account for 60% of the total marks. The deadline for submission of coursework to the class tutor is the final class of the term (week 11 for essay one, and week 22 for essay two). Assignments submitted after the final class of the term will not be assessed unless a mitigating circumstances form and supporting evidence has been submitted (further information see Student Handbook).

2. A compulsory in-class assessment of 2 hours which will carry 40% of the possible marks. This will take place in week 22. There will be a central re-sit date allocated for those who provide evidence that they cannot attend the unseen assessment in week 22.

All assessment must be passed to be eligible for credit. Please keep a copy of all work you submit.

You may produce up to two trial assignments if you wish which can be used for feedback. The course lecturer will give suggestions for improvement. These will NOT go forward for final assessment

Failure and Re-assessment of a Module

Re-take for modules where a student obtained less than 30% at first attempt. In this case the student will be required to re-enrol on the module, attend lectures and classes and retake all the assessment associated with that module. A module mark achieved under this mode will not be capped at the pass mark. Note that: students re-taking a module will be charged for the module.

Re-assessment for modules where a student obtained between 30% and 39% on the first attempt. The student is not required to attend lectures and will only need to re-attempt any failed element of that module (in most cases, the examination). Note that a reassessment will be capped at the pass mark 40% (this is a new College policy and applies to all students in 2015/16). If an application for consideration of mitigating circumstances has been accepted and a deferral awarded by the sub-board, the reassessment may be submitted without penalty and the reassessment will not be capped at the pass mark.

Further information about Alternative Assessment, Re-assessment & Re-takes, and a Compensated Fail can be found in the ‘Common Award Scheme Regulations’ document located on the My Birkbeck website: www.bbk.ac.uk/mybirkbeck/services/rules/casregs.pdf

Please note students cannot re-sit in order to improve a pass mark. Courses often evolve from one year to the next, with changes in content and emphasis and it is your responsibility to keep track of any variations in the syllabus. If you require further guidance about re-assessments, please contact your Programme Director.

5

REFERENCES

Please ensure that: • you use appropriate footnoting or end noting, • all references consulted, and all quotations reproduced, are properly cited, including where

necessary specific page references, • you include a full Bibliography representing the actual texts consulted • you use texts that are written in English only

It is essential that you reference sources correctly. If you fail to reference sources correctly, you run the risk of plagiarising. If a student’s work is proven to be plagiarised, this can result in the student automatically failing the course. The referencing formats below are widely adhered to in Economics:

BOOK-1 AUTHOR SURNAME, INITIAL(S). YEAR. TITLE, CITY: PUBLISHER. EXAMPLE: Denoeux, G. 1993. Urban Unrest in the Middle East: A Comparative Study of Informal Networks in Egypt, Iran

and Lebanon. New York: State University of New York Press.

BOOK-2 OR 3 AUTHORS SURNAMES, INITIALS. YEAR. TITLE, CITY: PUBLISHER. EXAMPLE: Buzan, B., O. Wever, and J. de Wilde. 1998. Security: A New Framework for Analysis. Boulder, CO: Lynne

Rienner.

BOOK-4 OR MORE AUTHORS SURNAME(S), INITIAL(S) ET AL., EDS. (IF RELEVANT) YEAR. TITLE, CITY: PUBLISHER. EXAMPLE: Held, D. et al., eds. 2005. Debating Globalization. Cambridge: Polity Press.

BOOK-SECOND OR LATER EDITION SURNAME(S), INITIAL(S). YEAR. TITLE, NUMBER EDITION, CITY: PUBLISHER. EXAMPLE: Calvocoressi, P. 2008. World Politics since 1945. 9th edition. London: Longman.

CHAPTER IN (EDITED) BOOK SURNAME(S) CHAPTER AUTHOR, INITIAL(S). YEAR. “TITLE OF CHAPTER,” IN SURNAME(S), INITIAL(S), ED(S). TITLE OF BOOK. CITY: PUBLISHER, PP:. EXAMPLE: Murphy, C. 2002. ‘‘Why Pay Attention to Global Governance?,’’ in Wilkinson, R., and S. Hughes, eds.

Global Governance: Critical Perspectives. London: Routledge, pp. xi-xvii.

JOURNAL ARTICLE SURNAME(S), INITIAL(S). YEAR. TITLE OF ARTICLE. NAME OF THE JOURNAL VOLUME(ISSUE NUMBER): PAGE NUMBERS. EXAMPLE: Martin, L., and B. Simmons. 1998. Theoretical and Empirical Studies of International Institutions.

International Organization 52(4): 729–757.

NEWSPAPER ARTICLE SURNAME(S), INITIAL(S). YEAR. TITLE OF ARTICLE. TITLE OF NEWSPAPER, DAY MONTH BEFORE PAGE NUMBER AND COLUMN LINE. EXAMPLE: Glapper, R. 2005. Transnational corporate recruitment and the welfare state: Pressing issues for

governments and lawyers. The New Times, 4 Sep. p.4b.

WEB PAGE SURNAME(S), INITIAL(S). YEAR. TITLE. PLACE OF PUBLICATION, PUBLISHER (IF ASCERTAINABLE). AVAILABLE FROM: INTERNET ADDRESS [ACCESSED DY/MNTH/YR]. EXAMPLE: Zuttel, F., and M. Hobland. 2002. References: Harvard systems. Powle, Burnemouth University. Available

from: http://www.burnemouth.edu/service.html [Accessed 18 November 2002].

6

READING LISTS

Purchase of ONE text is advisable (but not before the first class as we occasionally have to cancel classes).

Sloman and Garratt, Essentials of Economics 6th edition.

Lipsey and Chrystal, 13th edition.

Please note that it will only be necessary to purchase ONE text. The class tutor will give advice on which is the “best” text in the first class.

There are so many introductory texts on the market that are suitable for this course. You may well have inherited an alternative text or identified a second-hand copy of an adequate text in a bookshop. Using a second-hand text could be satisfactory as new texts are expensive. The tutor will be glad to give advice on this matter at the beginning of the course.

7

WEEK-BY-WEEK BREAKDOWN

Weeks 1 to 4: Introductory ideas and an analysis of the market forces of demand and supply – market price determination.

• Scarcity, choice and cost • Economic systems • Demand and supply curves • Market equilibrium, price floors and ceilings • Elasticity of demand and supply • Selected applications of price analysis.

Reading: Sloman: Ch. 1, 2, 3, 4

Weeks 5 to 7: The economics of the firm.

• Costs and their characteristics over the short and long run. • Profit maximisation. • Competitive and monopolistic behaviour. • Market rivalry and oligopoly. • Pricing under different objectives.

Reading: Sloman: Ch. 4, 5

Weeks 8 to 10: Allocative efficiency and market failure.

• Externalities, public and merit goods, asymmetric information. • Policy responses to market failure. • Government failure.

Reading: Sloman: Ch. 7

Weeks 11 to 13: Macroeconomics – basic models.

• Government Macro policy objectives and policy instruments • GDP, GNP as measures of welfare • The national income and expenditure model, AD and AS model • The income multiplier • Consumer and investment spending • The business cycle – recession and recovery

Reading: Sloman: Ch. 8, 9

Weeks 14 to 15: Fiscal and money analysis and policy.

• The role of government spending and taxation • National debt and the impact of government borrowing • Credit creation and money supply control • Interest rates in a global environment

Reading: Sloman: Ch.10, 12

8

Weeks 16 to 18: Inflation, deflation and unemployment.

• Consequences and causes of inflation, deflation and unemployment • Policy responses • The 'Phillips Curve' • NAIRU • Role of supply-side policies.

Reading: Sloman: Ch. 11, 12

Weeks 19 to 21: International trade.

• Why trade? Comparative advantage and free trade • Trade restrictions – tariff and non-tariff barriers • The balance of payments and the problem of deficits • Exchange rate systems • Development Strategies – Aid and Debt issues • Revision

Reading: Sloman: Ch. 13, 14

Week 22: 2 hours unseen in-class assessment

9

ESSAYS

Essay 1(Deadline week 11)

Essay 2 (Deadline week 20)

1

Certificate of Higher Education ECONOMICS

ACADEMIC YEAR 2018/2019 MODULE OUTLINE

Economic Principles (Fast-Track) FFEC902S4CCB

CLASS DETAILS

First Meeting Tuesday 15 Jan 2019, 6.00-9.00pm (11 Meetings plus 2 Sat schools)

Term Dates 15 January 2019 to 26 March 2019

Saturday Schools 9 February and 2 March, 10am-4pm/5pm

Module taught by Dr Anthony Conibear

Whilst we endeavour to teach on the Saturdays listed in the module outline, dates are liable to alteration after the module has begun.

Students should not be attending any classes until they have formally enrolled.

2

Contents CLASS DETAILS .................................................................................................................................. 1 MODULE DESCRIPTION ..................................................................................................................... 3 COURSEWORK AND ASSESSMENT................................................................................................... 4 REFERENCES ..................................................................................................................................... 5 READING LISTS .................................................................................................................................. 6 ESSAYS ............................................................................................................................................... 9

Please read the Certificate of Higher Education Economics Student Handbook carefully for information and College policies regarding your studies.

3

MODULE DESCRIPTION

An Explanation of basic economic principles is provided, in order to establish a foundation for the understanding of national and International economic issues and policies. You will develop analytical skills and discuss problems of principle and policy.

Aims

• The main aim of the module is to introduce basic economic principles as a foundation for the

understanding and discussion of national and international economic policies and issues. Class members are encouraged to discuss economic issues.

Student Outcomes

By the end of the module you should: • have gained a knowledge and understanding of the key terminology and themes in public policy

debate. • have gained an appreciation of the importance of critical thought and be able to apply basic

principles in the explaining of real world economic behaviour. • be able to think critically and independently about what you have read • have completed and been assessed on your coursework

Subject understanding and the ability to use a variety of analytical tools will be assessed in the course work.

Teaching Arrangements

Teaching and learning takes place by means of lectures, seminars and class presentations by students individually or in groups.

4

COURSEWORK AND ASSESSMENT

Students will be expected to prepare essays for formal assessment and to undertake a compulsory in-class assessment.

Assessment will consist of three elements:

1. Coursework amounting to 3,000 words in total to be made up of two assignments of 1,500 words each, to be submitted by weeks 5 and 10. These assignments will account for 60% of the total marks. The deadline for submission of coursework to the class tutor is the final class (week 11). Assignments submitted after the final class will not be assessed unless a mitigating circumstances form and supporting evidence has been submitted (further information see page 6).

2. A compulsory in-class assessment will take the form of unseen questions to be answered within 2 hours which will carry 40 % of the possible marks. This will take place in week 11. There will be a central re-sit date allocated for those who provide evidence that they cannot attend the unseen assessment in week 11.

3. In-class participation is marked as pass/fail. Criteria include regular contributions to class (e.g. group- work, discussions, mini-presentations or other exercises), awareness of required reading, listening/communication skills.

All assessment must be passed to be eligible for credit. Please keep a copy of all work you submit.

You may produce up to two trial assignments if you wish which can be used for feedback. The course lecturer will give suggestions for improvement. These will NOT go forward for final assessment.

5

REFERENCES

Please ensure that:

• you use appropriate footnoting or end noting, • all references consulted, and all quotations reproduced, are properly cited, including where

necessary specific page references, • you include a full Bibliography representing the actual texts consulted • you use texts that are written in English only

It is essential that you reference sources correctly. If you fail to reference sources correctly, you run the risk of plagiarising. If a student’s work is proven to be plagiarised, this can result in the student automatically failing the course.

The referencing formats below are widely adhered to in Economics:

BOOK-1 AUTHOR SURNAME, INITIAL(S). YEAR. TITLE, CITY: PUBLISHER. EXAMPLE: Denoeux, G. 1993. Urban Unrest in the Middle East: A Comparative Study of Informal Networks in Egypt, Iran

and Lebanon. New York: State University of New York Press.

BOOK-2 OR 3 AUTHORS SURNAMES, INITIALS. YEAR. TITLE, CITY: PUBLISHER. EXAMPLE: Buzan, B., O. Wever, and J. de Wilde. 1998. Security: A New Framework for Analysis. Boulder, CO: Lynne

Rienner.

BOOK-4 OR MORE AUTHORS SURNAME(S), INITIAL(S) ET AL., EDS. (IF RELEVANT) YEAR. TITLE, CITY: PUBLISHER. EXAMPLE: Held, D. et al., eds. 2005. Debating Globalization. Cambridge: Polity Press.

BOOK-SECOND OR LATER EDITION SURNAME(S), INITIAL(S). YEAR. TITLE, NUMBER EDITION, CITY: PUBLISHER. EXAMPLE: Calvocoressi, P. 2008. World Politics since 1945. 9th edition. London: Longman.

CHAPTER IN (EDITED) BOOK SURNAME(S) CHAPTER AUTHOR, INITIAL(S). YEAR. “TITLE OF CHAPTER,” IN SURNAME(S), INITIAL(S), ED(S). TITLE OF BOOK. CITY: PUBLISHER, PP:. EXAMPLE: Murphy, C. 2002. ‘‘Why Pay Attention to Global Governance?,’’ in Wilkinson, R., and S. Hughes, eds.

Global Governance: Critical Perspectives. London: Routledge, pp. xi-xvii.

JOURNAL ARTICLE SURNAME(S), INITIAL(S). YEAR. TITLE OF ARTICLE. NAME OF THE JOURNAL VOLUME(ISSUE NUMBER): PAGE NUMBERS. EXAMPLE: Martin, L., and B. Simmons. 1998. Theoretical and Empirical Studies of International Institutions.

International Organization 52(4): 729–757.

NEWSPAPER ARTICLE SURNAME(S), INITIAL(S). YEAR. TITLE OF ARTICLE. TITLE OF NEWSPAPER, DAY MONTH BEFORE PAGE NUMBER AND COLUMN LINE. EXAMPLE: Glapper, R. 2005. Transnational corporate recruitment and the welfare state: Pressing issues for

governments and lawyers. The New Times, 4 Sep. p.4b.

WEB PAGE SURNAME(S), INITIAL(S). YEAR. TITLE. PLACE OF PUBLICATION, PUBLISHER (IF ASCERTAINABLE). AVAILABLE FROM: INTERNET ADDRESS [ACCESSED DY/MNTH/YR]. EXAMPLE: Zuttel, F., and M. Hobland. 2002. References: Harvard systems. Powle, Burnemouth University. Available

from: http://www.burnemouth.edu/service.html [Accessed 18 November 2002].

6

READING LISTS

Purchase of some or all advisable (but not before the first class as we occasionally have to cancel classes)

MAIN READING

Students need to read one basic economics text. The main texts recommended for this module are:

Sloman. J. and Garratt, D.(2013) Essentials of Economics, (6th edition). London, Pearson.

Lipsey and Chrystal,(2015) Economics (13th edition) Oxford,OUP

The text by Sloman is less rigorous than the Lipsey and Chrystal text and therefore an easier read.

OTHER GENERAL READINGS

Begg and Varnasca, (2014) Economics, 11th edition.

Good bookshops include: The LSE Bookshop; Waterstones; Foyles; Secondhand Stores: Skoob Books, Judd Books Websites: abebooks.co.uk amazon.co.uk

OTHER SOURCES

Internet Sources www.ft.com www.economist.com www.bankofengland.co.uk www.hm-treasury.gov.uk. www.ons.gov.uk www.booksites.net

7

WEEK-BY-WEEK BREAKDOWN

The readings given below for each topic are in no sense comprehensive or required reading. An indication is given of the relevant chapters in the set texts, together with an identification of some of the better works dealing with the topics specified.

WEEK-BY-WEEK BREAKDOWN

Weeks 1 and 2: An Introduction and an analysis of the market, buyers and sellers and price

• Scarcity, choice and cost • Economic systems • Demand and supply curves • Market equilibrium, price floors and ceilings • Elasticity of demand and supply • Selected applications of price analysis.

Reading: Lipsey – chapters 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 and 5.

Sloman – Intro and chapters 1 and 2.

Week 3 and the first Saturday school: The economics of the firm

• Economic Costs, and their characteristics over the short and long run • Profit maximisation and how it is achieved • Competitive and monopolistic behaviour • Market rivalries and oligopolies.

Reading: Lipsey – chapters 8, 9, 10, and 11

Sloman – chapters 3 and 4

Week 4: The labour market and income distribution

• Demand and Supply of labour • Employment and wages • Minimum wages under competition and monosony • Income distribution and inequality.

Reading: Lipsey – chapters 14 and 15

Sloman – chapter 5

Week 5: Allocative efficiency and market failure

• Externalities, public and merit goods, asymmetric information • Policy responses to market failure.

Reading: Lipsey – chapter 18

Sloman – chapter 6

8

Weeks 6 and 7: Macro economics – basic models and measurement

• Government Macro policy objectives and policy instruments • GDP, GNP as measures of welfare • The national income and expenditure model • The income multiplier • Consumer and investment spending • The business cycle – recession and recovery

Reading: Lipsey – chapters 20, 21, 22 and 23

Sloman – chapters 7 and 8.

Weeks 8 and 9: Fiscal and monetary analysis and policy, Inflation and unemployment

• The role of government spending and taxation • National debt and the impact of government borrowing • Credit creation and money supply control • Interest rate determination • Money supply and interest rate changes in a global environment • Consequences of inflation and unemployment • Their causes and the policy responses • The 'Phillips Curve' and NAIRU • Role of supply-side policies.

Reading: Lipsey – chapters 24,25, 26, 27, 30 and 31

Sloman – chapters 8, 9 and 10

Week 10 and the second Saturday school: International trade and Development and Revision

• Why trade? Comparative advantage and free trade • Trade restrictions – tariff and non-tariff barriers • The balance of payments and the problem of deficits • Exchange rate systems • The Euro • Development Strategies – Aid and Debt

Reading: Lipsey – chapters 28, 29, 34 and 35.

Sloman – 11 and 12

Week 11: 2 hours unseen in-class assessment

9

ESSAYS

Essay 1 (Deadline Week 5)

Essay 2 (Deadline Week 10)

1

Certificate of Higher Education ECONOMICS

ACADEMIC YEAR 2017/2018 MODULE OUTLINE

Economic Principles (Fast-Track) FFEC902S4ECB

CLASS DETAILS

First Meeting Tuesday 30 April 2019, 6.00-9.00pm (11 Meetings plus 2 Sat schools)

Term Dates 30 April 2019 to 9 July 2019, 10am-4pm/5pm

Saturday Schools 4 May & 15 June 2019 (TBC)

Module taught by Dr Anthony Conibear

Whilst we endeavour to teach on the Saturdays listed in the module outline, dates are liable to alteration after the module has begun.

Students should not be attending any classes until they have formally enrolled.

2

Contents CLASS DETAILS .................................................................................................................................. 1 MODULE DESCRIPTION ..................................................................................................................... 3 COURSEWORK AND ASSESSMENT................................................................................................... 4 REFERENCES ..................................................................................................................................... 5 READING LISTS .................................................................................................................................. 6 ESSAYS ............................................................................................................................................... 9

Please read the Certificate of Higher Education Economics Student Handbook carefully for information and College policies regarding your studies.

3

MODULE DESCRIPTION

An Explanation of basic economic principles is provided, in order to establish a foundation for the understanding of national and International economic issues and policies. You will develop analytical skills and discuss problems of principle and policy.

Aims

• The main aim of the module is to introduce basic economic principles as a foundation for the

understanding and discussion of national and international economic policies and issues. Class members are encouraged to discuss economic issues.

Student Outcomes

By the end of the module you should: • have gained a knowledge and understanding of the key terminology and themes in public policy

debate. • have gained an appreciation of the importance of critical thought and be able to apply basic

principles in the explaining of real world economic behaviour. • be able to think critically and independently about what you have read • have completed and been assessed on your coursework

Subject understanding and the ability to use a variety of analytical tools will be assessed in the course work.

Teaching Arrangements

Teaching and learning takes place by means of lectures, seminars and class presentations by students individually or in groups.

4

COURSEWORK AND ASSESSMENT

Students will be expected to prepare essays for formal assessment and to undertake a compulsory in-class assessment.

Assessment will consist of three elements:

1. Coursework amounting to 3,000 words in total to be made up of two assignments of 1,500 words each, to be submitted by weeks 5 and 10. These assignments will account for 60% of the total marks. The deadline for submission of coursework to the class tutor is the final class (week 11). Assignments submitted after the final class will not be assessed unless a mitigating circumstances form and supporting evidence has been submitted (further information see page 6).

2. A compulsory in-class assessment will take the form of unseen questions to be answered within 2 hours which will carry 40 % of the possible marks. This will take place in week 11. There will be a central re-sit date allocated for those who provide evidence that they cannot attend the unseen assessment in week 11.

3. In-class participation is marked as pass/fail. Criteria include regular contributions to class (e.g. group- work, discussions, mini-presentations or other exercises), awareness of required reading, listening/communication skills.

All assessment must be passed to be eligible for credit. Please keep a copy of all work you submit.

You may produce up to two trial assignments if you wish which can be used for feedback. The course lecturer will give suggestions for improvement. These will NOT go forward for final assessment.

5

REFERENCES

Please ensure that:

• you use appropriate footnoting or end noting, • all references consulted, and all quotations reproduced, are properly cited, including where

necessary specific page references, • you include a full Bibliography representing the actual texts consulted • you use texts that are written in English only

It is essential that you reference sources correctly. If you fail to reference sources correctly, you run the risk of plagiarising. If a student’s work is proven to be plagiarised, this can result in the student automatically failing the course.

The referencing formats below are widely adhered to in Economics:

BOOK-1 AUTHOR SURNAME, INITIAL(S). YEAR. TITLE, CITY: PUBLISHER. EXAMPLE: Denoeux, G. 1993. Urban Unrest in the Middle East: A Comparative Study of Informal Networks in Egypt, Iran

and Lebanon. New York: State University of New York Press.

BOOK-2 OR 3 AUTHORS SURNAMES, INITIALS. YEAR. TITLE, CITY: PUBLISHER. EXAMPLE: Buzan, B., O. Wever, and J. de Wilde. 1998. Security: A New Framework for Analysis. Boulder, CO: Lynne

Rienner.

BOOK-4 OR MORE AUTHORS SURNAME(S), INITIAL(S) ET AL., EDS. (IF RELEVANT) YEAR. TITLE, CITY: PUBLISHER. EXAMPLE: Held, D. et al., eds. 2005. Debating Globalization. Cambridge: Polity Press.

BOOK-SECOND OR LATER EDITION SURNAME(S), INITIAL(S). YEAR. TITLE, NUMBER EDITION, CITY: PUBLISHER. EXAMPLE: Calvocoressi, P. 2008. World Politics since 1945. 9th edition. London: Longman.

CHAPTER IN (EDITED) BOOK SURNAME(S) CHAPTER AUTHOR, INITIAL(S). YEAR. “TITLE OF CHAPTER,” IN SURNAME(S), INITIAL(S), ED(S). TITLE OF BOOK. CITY: PUBLISHER, PP:. EXAMPLE: Murphy, C. 2002. ‘‘Why Pay Attention to Global Governance?,’’ in Wilkinson, R., and S. Hughes, eds.

Global Governance: Critical Perspectives. London: Routledge, pp. xi-xvii.

JOURNAL ARTICLE SURNAME(S), INITIAL(S). YEAR. TITLE OF ARTICLE. NAME OF THE JOURNAL VOLUME(ISSUE NUMBER): PAGE NUMBERS. EXAMPLE: Martin, L., and B. Simmons. 1998. Theoretical and Empirical Studies of International Institutions.

International Organization 52(4): 729–757.

NEWSPAPER ARTICLE SURNAME(S), INITIAL(S). YEAR. TITLE OF ARTICLE. TITLE OF NEWSPAPER, DAY MONTH BEFORE PAGE NUMBER AND COLUMN LINE. EXAMPLE: Glapper, R. 2005. Transnational corporate recruitment and the welfare state: Pressing issues for

governments and lawyers. The New Times, 4 Sep. p.4b.

WEB PAGE SURNAME(S), INITIAL(S). YEAR. TITLE. PLACE OF PUBLICATION, PUBLISHER (IF ASCERTAINABLE). AVAILABLE FROM: INTERNET ADDRESS [ACCESSED DY/MNTH/YR]. EXAMPLE: Zuttel, F., and M. Hobland. 2002. References: Harvard systems. Powle, Burnemouth University. Available

from: http://www.burnemouth.edu/service.html [Accessed 18 November 2002].

6

READING LISTS

Purchase of some or all advisable (but not before the first class as we occasionally have to cancel classes)

MAIN READING

Students need to read one basic economics text. The main texts recommended for this module are:

Sloman. J. and Garratt, D.(2013) Essentials of Economics, (6th edition). London, Pearson.

Lipsey and Chrystal,(2015) Economics (13th edition) Oxford,OUP

The text by Sloman is less rigorous than the Lipsey and Chrystal text and therefore an easier read.

OTHER GENERAL READINGS

Begg and Varnasca, (2014) Economics, 11th edition.

Good bookshops include: The LSE Bookshop; Waterstones; Foyles; Secondhand Stores: Skoob Books, Judd Books Websites: abebooks.co.uk amazon.co.uk

OTHER SOURCES

Internet Sources www.ft.com www.economist.com www.bankofengland.co.uk www.hm-treasury.gov.uk. www.ons.gov.uk www.booksites.net

Journals and Newspapers n/a

7

WEEK-BY-WEEK BREAKDOWN

The readings given below for each topic are in no sense comprehensive or required reading. An indication is given of the relevant chapters in the set texts, together with an identification of some of the better works dealing with the topics specified.

WEEK-BY-WEEK BREAKDOWN

Weeks 1 and 2: An Introduction and an analysis of the market, buyers and sellers and price

• Scarcity, choice and cost • Economic systems • Demand and supply curves • Market equilibrium, price floors and ceilings • Elasticity of demand and supply • Selected applications of price analysis.

Reading: Lipsey – chapters 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 and 5.

Sloman – Intro and chapters 1 and 2.

Week 3 and the first Saturday school: The economics of the firm

• Economic Costs, and their characteristics over the short and long run • Profit maximisation and how it is achieved • Competitive and monopolistic behaviour • Market rivalries and oligopolies.

Reading: Lipsey – chapters 8, 9, 10, and 11

Sloman – chapters 3 and 4

Week 4: The labour market and income distribution

• Demand and Supply of labour • Employment and wages • Minimum wages under competition and monosony • Income distribution and inequality.

Reading: Lipsey – chapters 14 and 15

Sloman – chapter 5

Week 5: Allocative efficiency and market failure

• Externalities, public and merit goods, asymmetric information • Policy responses to market failure.

Reading: Lipsey – chapter 18

Sloman – chapter 6

8

Weeks 6 and 7: Macro economics – basic models and measurement

• Government Macro policy objectives and policy instruments • GDP, GNP as measures of welfare • The national income and expenditure model • The income multiplier • Consumer and investment spending • The business cycle – recession and recovery

Reading: Lipsey – chapters 20, 21, 22 and 23

Sloman – chapters 7 and 8.

Weeks 8 and 9: Fiscal and monetary analysis and policy, Inflation and unemployment

• The role of government spending and taxation • National debt and the impact of government borrowing • Credit creation and money supply control • Interest rate determination • Money supply and interest rate changes in a global environment • Consequences of inflation and unemployment • Their causes and the policy responses • The 'Phillips Curve' and NAIRU • Role of supply-side policies.

Reading: Lipsey – chapters 24,25, 26, 27, 30 and 31

Sloman – chapters 8, 9 and 10

Week 10 and the second Saturday school: International trade and Development and Revision

• Why trade? Comparative advantage and free trade • Trade restrictions – tariff and non-tariff barriers • The balance of payments and the problem of deficits • Exchange rate systems • The Euro • Development Strategies – Aid and Debt

Reading: Lipsey – chapters 28, 29, 34 and 35.

Sloman – 11 and 12

Week 11: 2 hours unseen in-class assessment

9

ESSAYS

Essay 1 (Deadline Week 5)

Essay 2 (Deadline Week 10)