Course detail
International Economics
FP-FieKAcad. year: 2024/2025
This course aims to provide an up-to-date and understandable analytical unified framework for understanding traditional insights as well as the newest findings and approaches in international economics. In analysing both the real and monetary sides of the subject, the approach will help the student to gain and retain the underlying logic of international economics.
Language of instruction
Number of ECTS credits
Mode of study
Guarantor
Department
Entry knowledge
Rules for evaluation and completion of the course
Students attending the course will obtain credits based on the elaboration and presentation of a group assignment. The lecturer will assign the topics at the beginning of the semester
Students attending the course will be evaluated based on a comprehensive written exam test covering the entire module (final grade according to the ECTS).
Aims
At the end of the curricular unit the students will be able to understand international trade theories, determinants of international trade, international flows of goods and capital and national income accounting and the balance of payments, real and nominal exchange rates and theory of exchange-rate determination, supply and demand for loanable funds and for foreign-currency exchange, equilibrium in the open economy, structure of the foreign exchange-market, optimum currency areas and the European experience and how policies and events affect an open economy.
Study aids
Prerequisites and corequisites
Basic literature
MANKIW, N. G. Principles of Macroeconomics. Cengage Learning, 2015. ISBN 978-1-285-16591-2.
TEMIN, P. 2016. The American Dual Economy. International Journal of Political Economy, Routledge, 45(2), pp. 85-123. DOI: 10.1080/08911916.2016.1185311. TEMIN, P. 2016. The American Dual Economy. International Journal of Political Economy, Routledge, 45(2), pp. 85-123. DOI: 10.1080/08911916.2016.1185311.
Recommended reading
GRIFFIN, W. R., PUSTAY, M. W. International Business. Pearson, 2015. ISBN 978-1-292-01821-8.
NÖLKE, A., VLIEGENTHART, A. 2009. Enlarging the Varieties of Capitalism. The Emergence of Dependent Market Economies in East Central Europe, Routledge, 61(4), pp. 670-702. DOI: 10.1017/S0043887109990098.
Classification of course in study plans
- Programme MGR-UFRP-KS Master's 1 year of study, summer semester, compulsory-optional
Type of course unit
Guided consultation in combined form of studies
Teacher / Lecturer
Syllabus
2. The Heckscher-Ohlin Model.
3. The Standard Trade Model.
4. External Economies of Scale and the International Location of Production.
5. Trade Policy I: Tariffs and Import Quotas.
6. Trade Policy II: Export Subsidies and Other Instruments of Trade Policy.
7. The political Economy of Trade Policy - Sothisticated Arguments for Restricting International Trade.
8. International Movement of Labour and Capital.
9. Prices for International Transactions: Real and Nominal Exchange Rates. Theory of Exchange-Rate Determination based on Purchasing-Power Parity.
10. Optimum Currency Areas and the European Experience
11. Equilibrium in the Open Economy: Money, Interest Rates, and Exchange Rates.
12. Fiscal and Monetary Policy in a Small Open Economy.
13. International Negotiations and Trade Policy.