This course focuses on quantitative methods used in economics, which include mathematical and statistical methods used in microeconomics and macroeconomics.
The origins and consequences of conflict and cooperation in an interdependent global community are examined in order to analyze how transnational, as well as competing national, interests and institutions affect economic, political, and environmental choices and outcomes.
This course presents an overview of international financial management, including international financial markets, exchange rate behavior, and financing international trade.
This course provides an introduction to the development of the present system of money, banking, and financial institutions. Topics studied include analysis of central bank policy, capital markets, speculative markets, and portfolio theory.
Explains legal and political rules, the organization of government, and other institutional processes. Uses standard microeconomic tools and concepts, such as scarcity, choice, preferences, incentives, and supply and demand.
My administrative duties included managing teaching affairs, coordinating student schedules, handling new student registration, and assisting with course selection. I also served as an academic advisor for 3rd and 4th-year students, providing guidance on their economics coursework.