2017-2018 Undergraduate Catalog 
    
    Nov 23, 2024  
2017-2018 Undergraduate Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

Economics, General Economics Concentration, B.A.


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Chairman: Armando Rodriguez, Ph.D. University of Texas

Economics is the study of making choices. It is both a lens and an occupation. As a lens, economics enables us to view, organize, and explain the world around us in a coherent systematic manner. As an occupation, we find its fundamental principles are most often applied in the world of business, although not exclusively. Economics also prepares students for careers in fields as diverse as government service, law, and non-governmental institutions. Importantly, the economics degree offers outstanding preparation for graduate and professional programs.

The University of New Haven's undergraduate program in economics provides students with the analytical and technical skills that are valued by employers. We place considerable emphasis on providing our students with the wide array of practical skills and acquired intelligence necessary to respond to a changing natural and human environment. Our graduates bring a high degree of critical thinking, solid writing, and presentations skills to their employment field of choice. They are well-adapted, attentive, and prepared to respond to the inevitability of surprise, spontaneity, and innovation.

B.A. Economics majors will declare one of three concentrations. Two of these concentrations are comprised of a series of more specialized economics courses leading to a focus in Economic Sustainability or to one in Behavioral Economics. Alternatively, a student can choose to retain a more general and broader overview of Economics through the General Economics concentration.

The program goal of the B.A. in Economics is to prepare students for pursuing successful careers either in traditional fields or in any number of new, dynamic, and evolving fields. Our program provides students with a strong basis for life-long learning through professional experiences, modern economic theory combined with a truly balanced curriculum across the social and natural sciences and the humanities, and a relentless focus on recognizing the inevitability of surprise, spontaneity, and internal and external innovations.
 
The academic objectives of the program are to provide students with the following:

  • A systemic and holistic approach to problem solving founded on broad-based interdisciplinary knowledge crafted around sound economic principles and skillful use of traditional economic quantitative and technical skills.
  • A strong reliance on the scientific method as the foundation for approaching the understanding of risk and uncertainty in human, social, and natural systems.
  • A general understanding of economic sustainability issues stressing the importance of systemic interactions as the building blocks of the greater world.
  • Interdisciplinary thinking and collaboration in facing and solving complex issues of the modern world.
  • Highly developed individual behaviors and attitudes toward the natural and social environments based on introspection, reflection, creativity, and the scientific method.

University Core Curriculum: 40 credits


Majors that comply with the College of Business (CoB) core will complete the 40-credit University Core Curriculum with the following restrictions:

  • Core Competency 3 - Mathematical and Quantitative Literacy
  • Competency 3.1:  MATH 1108  - College Mathematics (or equivalent or higher)
  • Competency 3.2: QANL 2216  - Statistics
  • Core Competency 5 - Critical Thinking and Problem Solving
  • Competency 5.2: ECON 1134  - Principles of Economics II
  • Core Competency 7 - The Individual and Society
  • Competency 7.2:  ECON 1133  - Principles of Economics I

Majors that comply with the College of Business (CoB) core are not restricted in the way that the Writing Across the Curriculum requirement is satisfied.

Concentration in General Economics


Any three upper-division economics courses (9 credits)

Free Electives: 48 credits


  • 48 credits chosen in consultation with the adviser.

These credits can provide advanced material, either in the major or in course work, which reflects emerging issues of importance.  Students should consult with their academic adviser for course selection.

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