Graduate Program

Application Deadlines for Admission

Spring semester: August 1 (only under extreme circumstances)
Fall semester: International Students: March 1
  Domestic with aid: March 1
  Domestic without aid: July 1
  
Application Deadlines for Financial Aid

Financial aid decisions are made earlier than the application deadlines, so timely receipt of application materials is advisable if you are interested in financial aid.


Degrees Offered

The Department of Economics offers the M.A. degree in economics, with concentrations in environmental/natural resource economics, public finance, labor/human resources economics, international/development economics, econometrics or economic theory. The master’s degree is awarded under Plan I or Plan II.

The Department of Economics offers the Ph.D. degree with concentrations in environmental/natural resource economics, public finance, labor/human resources economics and international/development economics. The Ph.D. degree is awarded to students who have met the general requirements specified elsewhere in this catalog and have demonstrated competency in economic theory (micro and macro), econometrics and their concentration (9 hours). See the Economics Graduate Student Handbook for specific requirements.

Applicants to the Department of Economics M.A. and Ph.D. Programs:

Recommended undergraduate course work consists of 12 upper-division economic hours including one semester of intermediate micro theory and macro theory. Students are required to have completed one semester of calculus (preferably the equivalent of UNM’s MATH 162 or MATH 180). If you are considering a Ph.D., a course in Linear Algebra or Matrices is also strongly recommended. (e.g. UNM’s MATH 314 or MATH 321).

All applicants must submit their current (within the last three yeas) GRE-General Test Scores (verbal, quantitative, and analytical). All international students are required to submit their TOEFL scores.


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 504. 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 535. Evaluation of Public Programs. (3)



ECON 538. Topics in Applied Economics. (3)



ECON 540. Environmental and Natural Resource Modeling. (3)



ECON 541. Sustainable Development. (3)



ECON 542. Environmental and Natural Resource Economics: Survey. (3)



ECON 543. Natural Resource Economics. (3)



ECON 544. Environmental Economics. (3)



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



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



ECON 560. Introduction to Public Finance. (3)



ECON 562. Normative Theories of Public Finance. (3)



ECON 565. Positive Theories of Public Finance. (3)



ECON 570. Institutional Economics. (3)



ECON 580. International Trade. (3)



ECON 581. International Finance. (3)



ECON 582. 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 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