Graduate Curriculum Committee Course Proposal Form for Courses Numbered 6000 and Higher Note: Before completing this form, please carefully read the accompanying instructions. Submission guidelines are posted to the GCC Web site: http://www.ecu.edu/cs-acad/gcc/index.cfm 1. Course prefix and number: ECON 8112 2. Date: 09/13/2011 3. Requested action: X New Course Revision of Active Course Revision & Unbanking of a Banked Course Renumbering of an Existing Course from from to # X Required # Elective 4. Method(s) of delivery (check all boxes that apply for both current/proposed and expected future delivery methods within the next three years): Current or Proposed Delivery Method(s): X On-campus (face to face) Expected Future Delivery Method(s): X Distance Course (face to face off campus) Online (delivery of 50% or more of the instruction is offered online) 5. Justification (must cite accreditation and/or assessment by the graduate faculty) for new course or course revision or course renumbering: The graduate faculty of the Department of Economics identified a need in government, the private sector, and in academia for PhD graduates with advanced analytic and technical skills necessary for analysis, mitigation, management and regulation of risk—both environmental and financial. This requires an understanding of the underlying individual decision maker and firm behavior and their interaction within market and nonmarket settings. Theoretical modeling and empirical analysis complete the picture and allow for the identification of effective public policy and regulation. This doctoral program is unique within the state of North Carolina because it emphasizes risk modeling and analysis over a broad scope of applications that range from financial markets to natural hazards. Students with training from this program will be well equipped to qualify for high level positions within Federal and State Agencies that deal with natural hazards and 1 Revised 04-06-11 and posted fall of 2011 regulation of risk, as well as businesses for management and mitigation of risk. The assessment process of the Economics Graduate Faculty has determined that this is a necessary second course of a two course economic theory requirement for a Ph.D. program in Economics. 6. Course description exactly as it should appear in the next catalog: 8112. Economic Theory II (4) P: ECON 8111. Fundamental models and methods of economic analysis: elements of game theory; imperfect competition; analysis of market failure; problems of incomplete and asymmetric information; welfare economics, social choice and incentives, and mechanism design. 7. If this is a course revision, briefly describe the requested change: N/A 8. Course credit: Lecture Hours 3 1 3 1 Weekly OR Per Term Credit Hours Weekly OR Per Term Credit Hours Studio Weekly OR Per Term Credit Hours s.h. Practicum Weekly OR Per Term Credit Hours s.h. Internship Weekly OR Per Term Credit Hours s.h. Lab s.h. s.h. Other (e.g., independent study) Please explain. s.h. 4 Total Credit Hours s.h. 6 9. Anticipated annual student enrollment: 10. Changes in degree hours of your programs: Degree(s)/Program(s) Changes in Degree Hours PhD in Economics N/A 11. Affected degrees or academic programs, other than your programs: Degree(s)/Program(s) Changes in Degree Hours 12. Overlapping or duplication with affected units or programs: X Not applicable Documentation of notification to the affected academic degree programs is attached. 13. Council for Teacher Education (CTE) approval (for courses affecting teacher education): X Not applicable Applicable and CTE has given their approval. 2 Revised 04-06-11 and posted fall of 2011 14. University Service-Learning Committee (USLC) approval: X Not applicable Applicable and USLC has given their approval. 15. Statements of support: a. Staff Current staff is adequate X Additional staff is needed (describe needs in the box below): b. Facilities X Current facilities are adequate Additional facilities are needed (describe needs in the box below): c. Library X Initial library resources are adequate Initial resources are needed (in the box below, give a brief explanation and an estimate for the cost of acquisition of required initial resources): d. Unit computer resources X Unit computer resources are adequate Additional unit computer resources are needed (in the box below, give a brief explanation and an estimate for the cost of acquisition): e. ITCS resources X ITCS resources are not needed The following ITCS resources are needed (put a check beside each need): Mainframe computer system Statistical services Network connections Computer lab for students Software Approval from the Director of ITCS attached 16. Course information (see: Graduate Curriculum and Program Development Manual for instructions): a. Textbook(s) and/or readings: author(s), name, publication date, publisher, and city/state/country. Include ISBN (when applicable). Required: Mas-Colell, A., Whinston, M. D., & Green, J. R. (1995). Microeconomic Theory. New York, NY: Oxford University Press. ISBN: 978-0195073409 3 Revised 04-06-11 and posted fall of 2011 Jehle, G. A., & Reny P. J. (2001). Advanced Microeconomic Theory (2nd ed.). Boston, MA: Addison, Wesley. ISBN: 978-0321079169 Recommended: Laffont, J-J. (1988). Fundamentals of Public Economics. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. ISBN: 978-0262512190 Salanie, B. (2005). The Economics of Contracts: A Primer, (2nd Ed.). Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. ISBN: 978-0262195256 b. Course objectives for the course (student – centered, behavioral focus) Upon completion of this course, students will be able to: Critically analyze the substantial extensions of fundamental models of economic analysis; Creatively apply the fundamental tools of economic analysis to the design of economic mechanisms; Critically analyze problems of market failure resulting from externalities, public goods, and incentive distortions; Apply mechanism design theory to develop effective policy responses; Develop economic analytic tools applicable in all other areas of economics. c. Course topic outline 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Game Theory: Basic Elements and Non-Cooperative Equilibria Extensions: Dynamic Games and Cooperative Game Theory Market Power and the Foundations of Equilibrium Theory “Market Failure”: Externalities and Public Goods Informational Asymmetries: Adverse Selection and Moral Hazard Principal-Agent Problem, Incentives, and Mechanism Design Social Choice Theory and Welfare Economics d. List of course assignments, weighting of each assignment, and grading/evaluation system for determining a grade Problem sets (40%) Mid-term Exam (25%) Comprehensive Final Exam (35%). Evaluation System A 90% to 100% B 89% to 80% C 79% to 70% F Below 70% Outstanding Performance Acceptable Performance Inadequate Performance Failure 4 Revised 04-06-11 and posted fall of 2011