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A minimum of 26 credit hours; 23 credit hours must be in courses acceptable toward graduation.
A cumulative grade point average of at least 2.00 on all work.
Demonstrated academic achievement by satisfying the following:
Completion of Department of Economics admission coursework with grades of "C" or better:
The Department of Economics and the Department of Geography and Environmental Studies offer a Shared-Credit Undergraduate/Graduate Degrees Program. The Program enables completion of the B.A. in Economics (with one of three undergraduate minors from Geography and Environmental Studies), and the Master of Science (M.S.) in Geography in five years of study. See the "Shared-Credit Undergraduate/Graduate Degrees Programs" section of this page for specific admission information and requirements.
Undergraduate students in the B.A. in Economics program may seek admission to the Master of Public Administration (M.P.A.) under the Shared-Credit Undergraduate/Graduate Degrees Program. See the "Shared-Credit Undergraduate/Graduate Degrees Programs" section of this page for specific admission information and requirements.
A major in Economics consists of a minimum of 33 credit hours in Economics courses. Eighteen credit hours must be taken at UNM to satisfy the residency requirement. See the checklist below for specific course requirements.
The Major and Minor requirements are but a small percentage of the overall degree requirements to be satisfied. It is the responsibility of the student to satisfy all University degree requirements. It is highly recommended that students meet with their advisors two to three times a year (once per semester) to ensure they are on track to complete all requirements (department, college, and University) and for the purpose of applying to graduate.
A major in Economics requires a common core consisting of five courses:
See course descriptions for prerequisite and corequisite requirements.
Additionally, students must complete 18 credit hours of electives in Economics courses with a maximum of 3 credit hours from 2000-level courses and a minimum of 3 credit hours from the following courses: ECON *403, *407, *408, *409, *410, *424, *427, *429, *442, *445, *466, and *478.
An interdisciplinary approach is useful in the study of economics. Economics majors are encouraged to seek a minor in disciplines such as Computer Science, History, Geography, International Studies, Mathematics, Management, Political Science, Sociology or Sustainability Studies. Students should discuss the selection of a minor with the Economics Undergraduate Director. Students with specialized interests may design a distributed minor and petition the Department Chairperson for approval.
Pre-graduate: For students considering a Ph.D., a course in Linear Algebra or Matrices is strongly recommended (e.g. MATH **314 or MATH **321). Students should also consult with the Economics Undergraduate Director for additional recommendations. Suggested electives include:
Pre-law: Suggested electives include:
The Economics Department offers a variety of elective course topics such as the following:
The Department of Economics and the Department of Geography and Environmental Studies offer a Shared-Credit Undergraduate/Graduate Degrees Program. The Program enables completion of the B.A. in Economics (with one of three undergraduate minors from Geography and Environmental Studies), and the Master of Science (M.S.) in Geography in five years of study.
I. General Requirements
1. The Shared-Credit Undergraduate/Graduate Degrees Program is available to UNM Economics students with junior-year academic standing.
2. Students must maintain a minimum 3.25 GPA in their Economics major in order to be accepted into the Shared-Credit Undergraduate/Graduate Degrees Program.
3. Admission to the program is conditional until the B.A. degree is awarded.
4. All other requirements for admission to UNM graduate studies must be met in order to qualify for and pursue the M.S. in Geography under the Shared-Credit Undergraduate/Graduate Degrees Program.
5. In order to participate in the program, students must follow the usual graduate admission process to the M.S. in Geography prior to the beginning of the fourth-year of undergraduate study.
II. Undergraduate Requirements in the Department of Economics
1. Completion of all B.A. Economics requirements, including all General Education, lower- and upper-division, and Economics major coursework.
2. Completion of at least 12 credit hours of 300- and 400-level coursework that is complementary to the M.S. in Geography, including:
At least two of the following 400-level courses:
• ECON *407
• ECON *408 or ECON *409
• ECON *442
• ECON *466
The remaining 6 credit hours may be completed from the following 300-level courses:
• ECON *341
• ECON 342
• ECON *343
III. Undergraduate Requirements in the Department of Geography and Environmental Studies
Students must complete one of the three undergraduate minors in Geography and Environmental Studies:
Minor in Geographic Information Science
• Required: GEOG 181, **381L. (7 credit hours)
• Upper-Level Electives: GEOG 380L, *481L, 483L, 484L, 485L, 486L, 487L, 488L. (12 credit hours)
Minor in Geography
• Required: GEOG 1160, 1160L, 1165. (7 credit hours)
• Upper-Level Electives: GEOG 380L, 461, 462, 463, 464, 466, 483L, 484L, 485L, 486L, 487L, 488L. (6 credit hours. Additional courses beyond the required total may be applied to general electives.)
• General Electives: 9 additional credit hours of Geography coursework.
Minor in Law, Environment, and Geography
• Required: GEOG 1160, 1160L, 1165, 364. (10 credit hours)
• Upper-Level Electives: GEOG 461, 462, 463, 464, 466. (6 credit hours. Additional courses beyond the required total may be applied to general electives.)
• General Electives: GEOG 1150, **360, 365. (6 credit hours)
After the admission to the Shared-Credit Undergraduate/Graduate Degrees Program, GEOG 501 and 502 must be taken during the student’s fourth undergraduate year for undergraduate credit. In addition, another approved graduate course must be taken during the fourth undergraduate year. These credit hours are transcripted as undergraduate-level until the undergraduate degree is awarded, and full admission to the graduate portion of the program is granted.
IV. Graduate Requirements in the Department of Geography and Environmental Studies
1. The beginning of undergraduate Year Four marks the beginning of the time-to-degree for the graduate portion of the program.
2. After the student’s undergraduate degree is awarded and full admission to the graduate portion of the program is granted, GEOG 501 and 502, the three credit hours of approved graduate coursework from the fourth undergraduate year, and another three credit hours of 400-level electives from the minor are then transferred to the graduate-level transcript towards the M.S. To be transferred to the graduate-level transcript, a 400-level elective must be available for graduate credit or offered as a 400- or 500-level course.
3. During Year Five, students in the program must take 6 credit hours of thesis and 12 additional credit hours.
4. Additional credit hours must be from the student’s choice of the M.S. concentration in Environmental Studies or the M.S. concentration in Geographic Information Science.
5. All other requirements of the M.S. in Geography apply.
V. General Terms
1. The B.A. in Economics is awarded when all requirements are completed and is not contingent upon completion of the full Shared-Credit Undergraduate/Graduate Degrees Program.
2. Standard Graduate Studies Leave of Absence policy and readmission procedure applies to students in Shared-Credit Degrees Programs. However, upon readmission, the student is no longer eligible for the Shared-Credit Undergraduate/Graduate Degrees Program, and courses taken while an undergraduate are not applicable to a graduate degree.
3. Admission to the graduate portion of the program is provisional until the undergraduate degree is awarded.
4. Students who choose not to complete the graduate portion of the program are still awarded the undergraduate degree when all undergraduate requirements are met. Completed graduate-level courses may be applied to either an undergraduate major or minor, as per existing policy.
5. Where the Department of Geography and Environmental Studies chooses not to advance a student to the graduate portion of the program, completed graduate-level courses may be applied to either an undergraduate major or minor, as per existing policy.
Refer to the Geography and Environmental Studies: Graduate Program section of this Catalog for graduate degree and course information.
The Shared-Credit Undergraduate/Graduate Degrees Program offers B.A. in Economics students an accelerated route to earning both the B.A. (with a minor in Public Administration) and Master of Public Administration (M.P.A.) degrees. The Program allows students to earn graduate credit during their senior academic year, thereby reducing time and costs for completing both degrees.
Through the B.A. in Economics/M.P.A. Shared-Credit Degrees Program, students complete a minimum of 120 credit hours for the B.A. and 42 credit hours for the M.P.A.
Progression
Admission Requirements
This Shared-Credit Degrees Program is available only to B.A. in Economics students who have achieved junior-year academic standing or higher. Invitation is based on academic performance; only students with an overall cumulative GPA of 3.25 or higher and a GPA of 3.0 in the following Economics courses are considered: ECON 300, 303, 309, (315 or *320 or *335 or *341 or *350).
Admission to the graduate portion of the program is provisional until completion and award of the undergraduate degree.
Undergraduate Year Requirements
Once accepted into the Shared-Credit degrees program, the undergraduate student must complete the Public Administration shared-credit minor as part of the bachelor's degree requirements. Required courses are as follows:
Graduate Year Requirements
After the student is awarded the undergraduate degree and is admitted into the M.P.A. program, the following courses are required:
Should an admitted student choose not to complete the graduate portion of the program, the B.A. in Sociology is awarded on completion of all undergraduate requirements. Refer to the School of Public Administration: Graduate Program section of this Catalog for graduate degree and course information.
Economics is an excellent minor for students pursuing majors such as Biology, Business Administration, Geography, History, Journalism and Mass Communication, and Political Science, and for those building a pre-professional bachelor’s degree such as pre-law, pre-M.B.A. or pre-M.P.A.
A minor in Economics requires a total of 18 credit hours consisting of:
The departmental honors program is open to outstanding economics majors, typically in their junior year. After consulting with a faculty member willing to supervise their research, students must enroll in ECON 498 Reading for Honors and ECON 499 Senior Honors Thesis. These courses are in addition to those required for the major. University requirements for graduating with departmental honors include an overall grade point average of 3.20 and at least 7 credit hours in departmental honors courses. Interested students should contact the Economics Undergraduate Director for further information.
ECON 1996. Topics. (1-6, no limit Δ)
ECON 2110. Macroeconomic Principles. (3)
ECON 2120. Microeconomic Principles. (3)
ECON 2125. Society and Environment. (3)
ECON 2130. Personal Investing. (3)
ECON 2220. Economics of Race and Gender. (3)
ECON 2996. Topics. (1-6, no limit Δ)
ECON 300. Intermediate Microeconomics I. (3)
ECON 303. Intermediate Macroeconomics I. (3)
ECON 307. Economics Tools. (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 *369. Problem-Based Learning Using Data Analytics. (3, may be repeated twice Δ)
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 *424. International Trade. (3)
ECON *427. Topics in Labor Economics. (3)
ECON *442. Topics in Environmental and Natural Resource Economics. (3)
ECON 451. Independent Study. (1-3 to a maximum of 6 Δ)
ECON *466. Public Sector Project Analysis. (3)
ECON *478. Seminar in International Studies. (3)
ECON 498. Reading for Honors. (3, may be repeated once Δ)
ECON 499. Senior Honors Thesis. (4)
ECON 501. Microeconomics I. (3)
ECON 504. Mathematical Tools and Economic Models. (3)
ECON 506. Macroeconomics [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 533. Seminars in Industrial Organization. (3)
ECON 534. Experimental Economics. (3)
ECON 538. Topics in Applied Economics. (3, may be repeated once Δ)
ECON 540. Natural Resource, Environmental, and Ecological Modeling I. (3)
ECON 542. Topics in Environmental, Resource, and Ecological Economics. (3, may be repeated four times Δ)
ECON 543. Natural Resource, Environmental, and Ecological Modeling II. (3)
ECON 544. Environmental Economics. (3)
ECON 545. Water Resources II: Models. (4)
ECON 546. Water Resources I: Contemporary Issues. (4)
ECON 551. Independent Study. (1-3 to a maximum of 6 Δ)
ECON 560. Public Economics. (3)
ECON 564. Topics in Health Economics. (3, may be repeated once Δ)
ECON 565. Topics in Public and Labor Economics. (3, may be repeated once Δ)
ECON 581. International Development and Finance. (3)
ECON 582. Topics in International and Sustainable Development. (3)
ECON 583. Development Economics. (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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