Here are the courses that I regularly teach at JMU, with catalog descriptions and links to my pages:
GECON 200, Introduction to Macroeconomics: Behavior of systems at the national and international levels. Topics include the methodology of economics as a social science, supply and demand, definition and measurement of important macroeconomic variables, and theoretical models of growth, inflation, interest rates, unemployment, business cycles, stabilization policy, exchange rates and the balance of payments.
ECON 201, Principles of Microeconomics: Topics covered include supply and demand, consumer choice, economics of the firm and industry, production costs, distribution theory, international trade, comparative economic systems, and the philosophy of economics.
ECON 385, Econometrics: Course discusses construction of models based on economic theory including identification of variables, development and testing of hypotheses for single- and multi-equation systems.
MBA 641, Microeconomics of Business Decision-Making: This course is designed to provide graduate business students with the basic analytical tools needed to understand the decisions made by profit-maximizing firms and the causal linkages between these decisions and market structures. The course uses case study approach to examine market demand, the costs and organization of production, and the structures of the markets in which firms operate.
