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Centre for Financial & Management Studies (CeFiMS) - University of London

Postgraduate Diploma in Economic Principles

Structure and Syllabus

For the PG Diploma, students are required to take all four courses from the list offered.

Microeconomic theory and applications [C214]
Macroeconomic principles and issues [C215]
International Economics [C216]
Mathematics and statistics for economists [C217]

Detailed Syllabus

EP101
Microeconomic theory and applications [C214]

This course is designed to provide a solid grounding in microeconomic theory - a body of knowledge which focuses on the behaviour of individual units in a market economy. The course is about the economic principles underlying the theories of market demand and supply. It develops models to explain economic behaviour of consumers and producers and the ways in which they interact in a market economy. By the end of the course, students will have covered the four main topics needed to understand the basis of microeconomic theory: the basic concepts of the market, demand, supply and equilibrium; the principles underlying consumer demand; the principles underpinning the theory of the firm; and the concept of market structures, especially competitive and monopolistic markets.

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EP102
Macroeconomic principles and issues [C215]

Macroeconomic principles and issues is concerned with the economic principles used to model the economy as a whole. It is designed to teach the tools and techniques for analysing aggregate economic behaviour and policy formulation in a market economy. The types of questions students will consider are those relating to headline economic issues of inflation, unemployment, economic growth, money supply, government deficits and interest rates. The unit teaches and analyses economic models designed to answer questions such as how inflation is to be explained, what determines economic growth, why there are periods of sustained unemployment, what determines the rate of interest, and how monetary and fiscal policies affect the economy.

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EP103
International economics [C216]

This course is concerned with the economic principles used to model a country's international relationships. The course aims to teach the tools and techniques for analysing the trade and money transactions between economies and for assessing their policy implications. International economics builds on the theories and models of macroeconomics and microeconomics in order to develop a new set of economic principles which apply to an economy's international trade and money relationships. Questions and subject areas addressed in the course include: why do countries trade and who gains from trade; how can patterns of trade be explained; the arguments for and against free trade versus protectionism; the implications of economic integration between countries; the relationship between international trade and economic development; how foreign exchange rates are determined; why there can be persistent deficits or surpluses in the balance of payments; why one country's macroeconomic policies can affect another's economic performance; and what is international money.

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EP104
Mathematics and statistics for economists [C217]

The topics covered in this course include differential calculus, maximisation subject to constraints, frequency distributions, probability theory and hypothesis testing. These techniques are taught with reference to their applications to economic principles. Because the key to success in understanding mathematical techniques is practice, the course provides a wide range of problems for solution, as well as the theoretical foundations of their uses in economics, and includes appropriate exercises. The course aims to provide students with the necessary background for advanced study in market economics and econometrics. It should also enable them to use basic mathematical and statistical techniques for economic analysis.
 

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