Previous IU South Bend Campus Bulletins

Students are ordinarily subject to the curricular requirements outlined in the Bulletin in effect at the start of their current degree. See below for links to previous Bulletins (bulletins prior to 2013-2014 are in PDF format only).

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Economics | ECON

Economics | ECON

P Prerequisite | C Co-requisite | R Recommended
I Fall Semester | II Spring Semester | S Summer Session/s


  • ECON-E 103 Introduction to Microeconomics (3 cr.) Scarcity, opportunity cost, competitive and non-competitive market pricing, and interdependence as an analytical core.  Individual sections apply this core to a variety of current economic policy problems such as poverty, pollution, excise taxes, rent controls, and farm subsidies. I, II, S
  • ECON-E 104 Introduction to Macroeconomics (3 cr.) Measuring and explaining aggregate economic performance, money, monetary policy, and fiscal policy as an analytical core.  Individual sections apply this core to a variety of current economic policy problems such as inflation, unemployment, and economic growth. I, II, S
  • ECON-E 270 Introduction to Statistical Theory in Economics and Business (3 cr.) P: BUS-K 201, MATH-M 118. Credit not given for both ECON-E 270 and MATH-K 310. Review of basic probability concepts, sampling, inference and testing statistical hypotheses. Applications of regression and correlation theory, analysis of variance and elementary decision theory. I, II, S
  • ECON-E 304 Survey of Labor Economics (3 cr.) P: ECON-E 103. Economics problems of the wage earner in modern society; structure, policies, and problems of labor organizations; employer and governmental labor relations. I
  • ECON-E 305 Money and Banking (3 cr.) P: ECON-E 103, ECON-E 104. Monetary and banking system of the U.S. The supply and control of money. The impact of money on the U.S. economy. Topics in the application of Federal Reserve monetary policy. Analytical treatment of the Federal Reserve system and the commercial banking industry. II
  • ECON-E 308 Survey of Public Finance (3 cr.) P: ECON-E 103, ECON-E 104. Analysis of the impact of government activity upon the economy. Topics include: economic functions of government, public decision making, federal budget process, principles of taxation, and major United States taxes. I
  • ECON-E 315 Collective Bargaining: Practices and Problems (3 cr.) P: ECON-E 304 or consent of instructor. Collective bargaining in contemporary economy; economic, social, and legal problems involved in negotiating; administration of collective bargaining agreement through grievance procedure and arbitration. II
  • ECON-E 321 Intermediate Microeconomic Theory (3 cr.) P: ECON-E 103. The economics of consumer choice. The economics of production, cost minimization and profit maximization for business firms in the short run and long run under various market structures. Competition and adjustment to market equilibrium. Introduction to game theory, strategic interaction, and noncooperative equilibria. I
  • ECON-E 322 Intermediate Macroeconomic Theory (3 cr.) P: ECON-E 104. National income accounting; theory of income, employment, and price level. Countercyclical and other public policy measures. II
  • ECON-E 344 Health Economics (3 cr.) P: ECON-E 321, R: ECON-E 270 or equivalent is strongly recommended. Systematic introduction to health economics and economics of health care, emphasis on basic economic concepts, such as supply and demand, production of health, information economics, choice under uncertainty, health insurance markets, Medicare and Medicaid, managed care, government intervention and regulation.  Survey course with some topics in some depth.
  • ECON-E 375 Introduction to Mathematical Economics (3 cr.) P: ECON-E 103, ECON-E 104, MATH-E 118 and MATH-E 119. Applications of mathematical concepts to equilibrium and optimization. Applications of matrix theory to input-output analysis, activity analysis, and models of capital accumulation.
  • ECON-E 430 International Economics (3 cr.) P: ECON-E 103, ECON-E 104. Gains from trade, relation between factor rentals and goods prices, distributional effects of trade, tariff policy and quantitative interferences, trade problems of developing countries, discrimination and customs unions, balance-of-payments adjustment via prices and incomes, exchange rate policy, role of international reserves. II
  • ECON-E 470 Introduction to Econometrics (3 cr.) P: ECON-E 270 or MATH-K 310. Applications of regression analysis to economic and business data. Estimation and hypothesis testing of the classical regression model. Heteroscedasticity, collinearity, errors in observation, functional forms and autoregressive models. Estimation of simultaneous equation models. I (even years)
  • ECON-E 490 Advanced Undergraduate Seminar in Economics (3 cr.) P: ECON-E 321, ECON-E 322, and ECON-E 470, or consent of instructor. Advanced intensive study of a topic area in economics. Topics will vary. May be repeated with different topics for a maximum of 9 credit hours. II
  • ECON-S 103 Introduction to Microeconomics-Honors (3 cr.) P: Consent of the coordinator of the honors program or the instructor. Introductory microeconomics course for students admitted to honors program. I
  • ECON-S 104 Introduction to Macroeconomics-Honors (3 cr.) P: Consent of the coordinator of the honors program or the instructor. Designed for freshmen students for superior ability. Covers same core material as E104. Small sections. II

Academic Bulletins

PDF Version

2016-2017 Campus Bulletin
2015-2016 Campus Bulletin
2014-2015 Campus Bulletin

Please be aware that the PDF is formatted from the webpages; some pages may be out of order.