Economics

Robert P. Berrens, Chairperson
The University of New Mexico
Department of Economics
MSC05 3060
1 University of New Mexico
Albuquerque, NM 87131-0001
(505) 277-5304; FAX (505) 277-9445

Professors
Robert P. Berrens, Ph.D., Oregon State University
Alok K. Bohara, Ph.D., University of Colorado
David S. Brookshire, Ph.D., The University of New Mexico
Janie Chermak, Ph.D., Colorado School of Mines
Philip Ganderton, Ph.D., University of California, Santa Barbara
Kate Krause, Ph.D., University of Wisconsin
Christine Sauer, Ph.D., Brown University
Richard Santos, Ph.D., Michigan State University
Robert O. Valdez, Ph.D., Pardee RAND School of Public Policy

Associate Professors
Melissa Binder, Ph.D., Columbia University
Matias Fontenla, Ph.D., University of Texas at Austin
Jennifer Thacher, Ph.D., University of Colorado

Assistant Professors
Margaret E. Blume-Kohout, Ph.D., Pardee RAND Graduate School
Shana McDermott, Ph.D., University of Wyoming, Laramie
David N. van der Goes, Ph.D., Lehigh University
Jingjing Wang, Ph.D., University of California, Riverside
Brady Horn, Ph.D., Washington State University

Lecturers
Claudia Diaz Fuentes, Ph.D., Pardee RAND Graduate School
Cristina Reiser, Ph.D., University of Tennessee

Affiliated Faculty
Richard Bernknopf, Ph.D., George Washington University (Research Professor)
Samuel Howorth, Ph.D., The University of New Mexico (Research Scholar)
Maurice Moffett, Ph.D., The University of New Mexico (Adjunct Assistant Professor)
Lawrence Waldman, Ph.D., The University of New Mexico (Lecturer III)

Professors Emeriti
Shaul Ben-David, Ph.D., Cornell University
F. Lee Brown, Ph.D., Purdue University
H. Stuart Burness, Ph.D., University of Kansas
Donald Coes, Ph.D., Princeton University
Ronald Cummings, Ph.D., University of Kansas
Micha Gisser, Ph.D., University of Chicago
Peter Gregory, Ph.D., Harvard University
David Hamilton, Ph.D., University of Texas
Chung Pham, Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania
Donald Tailby, Ph.D., Rutgers University
Paul Therkildsen, Ph.D., University of Colorado
Nathaniel Wollman, Ph.D., Princeton University


Introduction

What’s the best way to reduce carbon emissions? Is a green economy possible? What should be done about the federal budget deficit? Will graduating seniors ever collect on Social Security? Can government policies reduce unemployment? Is crime an economic problem? Is obesity an economic problem? Why are some countries rich and others poor? Does international trade help or hurt workers in the United States? 

Economics provides answers to questions like these by analyzing how societies and markets allocate scarce resources, how incentives shape human behavior and why there are tradeoffs in virtually all public policy options. Majors develop analytical and quantitative skills including modeling and data analysis. They understand macroeconomic relationships that explain economic growth, unemployment and inflation and exchange rate fluctuations. They also study the microeconomics of the public sector, industrial organization, labor and human resources, health, natural resource use, the environment, trade and development.


Courses

ECON 105. Introductory Macroeconomics. (3)



ECON 106. Introductory Microeconomics. (3)



ECON 203. Society and the Environment. (3)



ECON 212. Personal Investing. (3)



ECON 239. Economics of Race and Gender. (3)



ECON **300. Intermediate Microeconomics I. (3)



ECON **303. Intermediate Macroeconomics I. (3)



ECON **309. Introductory Statistics and Econometrics. (3)



ECON **315. Money and Banking. (3)



ECON *320. Labor Economics. (3)



ECON *321. Development Economics. (3)



ECON *330. Consumer Economics. (3)



ECON *331. Economics of Poverty and Discrimination. (3)



ECON *332. Economics of Regulation. (3)



ECON *333. Industrial Organization. (3)



ECON *335. Health Economics. (3)



ECON *341. Urban and Regional Economics. (3)



ECON 342. Environmental Economics. (3)



ECON *343. Natural Resource Economics. (3)



ECON *350. Public Finance. (3)



ECON *360. History of Economic Thought. (3)



ECON 395. Seminar in Current Economic Issues. (1-3, no limit Δ)



ECON *403. Intermediate Macroeconomics II. (3)



ECON *407. Mathematical Methods in Economics. (3)



ECON *408. Economic Forecasting Methods: A Time Series Approach. (3)



ECON *409. Intermediate Econometrics. (3)



ECON *410. Topics in Health Economics. (3, no limit Δ)



ECON *421. Latin American Economics. (3)



ECON *423. Topics in Latin American Development. (3)



ECON *424. International Trade. (3)



ECON *427. Topics in Labor Economics. (3)



ECON *429. International Finance. (3)



ECON *442. Topics in Environmental and Natural Resource Economics. (3)



ECON *445. Topics in Public Finance. (3)



ECON 451 / 551 - 452 / 552. Independent Study. (1-3, 1-3)



ECON *466. Public Sector Project Analysis. (3)



ECON *478. Seminar in International Studies. (3)



ECON 497-498. Reading for Honors. (3,3)



ECON 499. Senior Honors Thesis. (4)



ECON 501. Microeconomics I. (3)



ECON 503. Economic Theory. (3)



ECON 504. Mathematical Tools and Economic Models. (3)



ECON 505. Applied Macroeconomics. (3)



ECON 506. Macroeconomics I. (3)



ECON 508. Statistics and Introduction to Econometrics. (3)



ECON 509. Econometrics I. (3)



ECON 510. Econometrics II. (3)



ECON 513. Microeconomics II. (3)



ECON 514. Macroeconomics II. (3)



ECON 520. Labor Economics. (3)



ECON 521. Comparative Labor Problems. (3)



ECON 522. Selected Groups in the Work Force. (3)



ECON 533. Seminars in Industrial Organization. (3)



ECON 534. Experimental Economics. (3)



ECON 538. Topics in Applied Economics. (3)



ECON 540. Natural Resource, Environmental, and Ecological Modeling I [Environmental and Natural Resource Modeling]. (3)



ECON 542. Topics in Environmental, Resource, and Ecological Economics [Environmental and Natural Resource Economics: Survey]. (3 to a maximum of 15 Δ [3])



ECON 543. Natural Resource, Environmental, and Ecological Modeling II [Natural Resource Economics]. (3)



ECON 544. Environmental Economics. (3)



ECON 545. Water Resources II–Models. (4)



ECON 546. WWater Resources I-Contemporary Issues. (4)



ECON 551 / 451 - 552 / 452. Independent Study. (2-3, 2-3)



ECON 560. Public Economics [Introduction to Public Finance]. (3)



ECON 562. Evaluation of Public Programs [Normative Theories of Public Finance]. (3)



ECON 564. Seminar in Health Economics. (3)



ECON 565. Topics in Public Economics [Positive Theories of Public Finance]. (3 to a maximum of 15 Δ [3])



ECON 570. Institutional Economics. (3)



ECON 581. International Development and Finance [International Finance]. (3)



ECON 582. Topics in International and Sustainable Development [Topics in International and Development Economics]. (3)



ECON 583. Development Economics. (3)



ECON 584. Interdisciplinary Seminar on Problems of Modernization in Latin America. (3)



ECON 585. Sustainable Development. (3)



ECON 595. Workshop in Applied Economics. (1-3)



ECON 599. Master’s Thesis. (1-6, no limit Δ)



ECON 699. Dissertation. (3-12, no limit Δ)



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Office of the Registrar

MSC 11 6325
1 University of New Mexico
Albuquerque, NM 87131

Phone: (505) 277-8900
Fax: (505) 277-6809