Course detail
Market Economy
FP-ERBMECEAcad. year: 2018/2019
Subject The Market Economy is based on knowledge of the principles of market economics and is designed to give students an overview of the most important findings and theories in the field of behavior of all economic entities that economic theory defines as the aggregate of households, firms and the state. This is the interpenetration and interlinking of knowledge, which are generally divided into two areas: microeconomics and macroeconomics.
Language of instruction
Number of ECTS credits
Mode of study
Department
Offered to foreign students
Learning outcomes of the course unit
Prerequisites
Co-requisites
Planned learning activities and teaching methods
Assesment methods and criteria linked to learning outcomes
Evaluation of the seminars consists of three parts:
1. final test – it’s evaluated a maximum of 25 points, the minimum is 50%.
2. active attendance - maximum of 5 points.
Successful completion of a credit test on topics covered in seminars. Active participation in lectures and seminars. Form of examination: written test. The integrated knowledge of microeconomics and macroeconomics in principal connections is considered. Grading is awarded according to the Rules for Studies and Examination valid at BUT and reflects student’s performance.
The scale of the resulting classification:
(student may gain from exercise 30 points and max.70 points of the test, a total of 100 points)
A: 90-100 points
B: 80-89 points
C: 70-79 points
D: 60-69 points
E: 50-59 points
F: less than 50 points
Course curriculum
2. The basics of supply and demand - utility and its measurement. Optimum consumers. Market demand. The law of diminishing demand.
3. Behavior of firms in a perfectly competitive market - accounting costs and economic costs. Accounting profit and economic profit. Cost-sharing. Profit as revenues less cost. Supply curve and a point of closure of the company.
4. Individual and market demand - Market equilibrium and efficiency - Market equilibrium and equilibrium price. Achieving market equilibrium. Stability of market equilibrium. Equalization of marginal utility and marginal costs.
5. Consumer behaviour - Firm behavior in imperfect competition - Establishment of imperfect competition, the basic characteristics of market structures: monopoly, oligopoly. monopolistic competition
6. Markets for factor inputs - Capital market, labor market, land
7. Impact of Governments decision
8. Aggregate supply, aggregate demand, growth and decrease of AD and AS, aggregate expenditures, slope of the AS curve
9. The measurement of the economic output, national product (GDP, GNP) and national income.
10. The money market, quantitative theory - neutrality of money. Inflation, types of inflation, relationship between inflation and unemployment.
11. The labour market, natural rate of unemployment, Phillips curve theories
12. The theory of business cycle. Fiscal policy – state budget, public finance, expansionary and restrictive fiscal policy.
13. Monetary policy – monetary goals and tools, expansionary and restrictive monetary policy.
Work placements
Aims
Specification of controlled education, way of implementation and compensation for absences
Absence in seminars could be recompense with a special assignment or with a special exam test.
Recommended optional programme components
Prerequisites and corequisites
Basic literature
SAMUELSON, P.A. a NORDHAUS, W.D. Economics. 19th edition . McGraw-Hill Education, 2009. 744 p. ISBN 978-0073511290.
Recommended reading
STIGLITZ, J. E. Freefall: free markets, and the sinking of the world economy. London: Penguin Books, 2010, 443 s. ISBN 978-0-14-104512-2.
Classification of course in study plans
Type of course unit
Lecture
Teacher / Lecturer
Syllabus
2. The basics of supply and demand - utility and its measurement. Optimum consumers. Market demand. The law of diminishing demand.
3. Behavior of firms in a perfectly competitive market - accounting costs and economic costs. Accounting profit and economic profit. Cost-sharing. Profit as revenues less cost. Supply curve and a point of closure of the company.
4. Individual and market demand - Market equilibrium and efficiency - Market equilibrium and equilibrium price. Achieving market equilibrium. Stability of market equilibrium. Equalization of marginal utility and marginal costs.
5. Consumer behaviour - Firm behavior in imperfect competition - Establishment of imperfect competition, the basic characteristics of market structures: monopoly, oligopoly. monopolistic competition
6. Markets for factor inputs - Capital market, labor market, land
7. Impact of Governments decision
8. Aggregate supply, aggregate demand, growth and decrease of AD and AS, aggregate expenditures, slope of the AS curve
9. The measurement of the economic output, national product (GDP, GNP) and national income.
10. The money market, quantitative theory - neutrality of money. Inflation, types of inflation, relationship between inflation and unemployment.
11. The labour market, natural rate of unemployment, Phillips curve theories
12. The theory of business cycle. Fiscal policy – state budget, public finance, expansionary and restrictive fiscal policy.
13. Monetary policy – monetary goals and tools, expansionary and restrictive monetary policy.