CdSECONOMICS
Codice257PP
CFU12
PeriodoSecondo semestre
LinguaInglese
By the end of the course the students should have developed skills that will enable them to autonomously and critically discuss articles published on the major economic journals concerning economic growth, consumption and investment theories, theories of economic fluctuations.
The student who successfully completes the course will have the ability to master some relevant optimization techniques that are commonly used in modern macroeconomics.
- The student will be assessed on his/her demonstrated ability to discuss the main course contents using the appropriate terminology.
- In the written exam the student must demonstrate his/her knowledge of the course material and to organise an effective and correctly written reply.
Methods:
- Final written exam
- Homeworks
Theoretical and quantitative skills related to macroeconomic models
Oral and written examinations and homeworks. Active partecipation to the classses.
The student should be able to read and understand the most of specialized journals in macroeconomics
Oral and written examinations and homeworks.
Basics of macroeconomic and microeconomic theory.
Delivery: face to face and in streaming
Attendance: very advised
Learning activities:
- attending lectures
- individual study
Teaching methods:
- Lectures
- Laboratories with tutors
The first module on the dynamics in the long run is organized as follows:
- Solow model of economic growth
- Golden Rule
- Natural resources and growth
- Exogenous growth with intertemporal optimizing agents
- Poverty traps and structural change
- Human capital and growth
- Knowledge and growth
- Innovation and growth
- Public debt
- Inequality
- Search and matching model in labour market
The second module is organized as follows:
- Consumption and the permanent income hypothesis
- Workhorses of (neoclassical) modern macro: RBC and DSGE
- Monetary policy
- Fiscal policy
The third module examines alternative macroeconomic theories and it is organized as follows:
- macroeconomic stylized facts
- classical macroeconomics
- Keynesian macroeconomics
- the neoclassical synthesis
- monetarism
- the new classicals
- the new neoclassical synthesis
- Lecture notes
- Papers discussed in the lectures
- Romer, David. Advanced Macroeconomics. McGraw Hill, 2019
- Olivier J. Blanchard and S. Fischer, Lectures in Macroeconomics, M.I.T. Press, 1989
- Carlin W. and Soskice D. , Macroeconomics. Imperfections, Institutions, and Policies, Oxford University Press, 2014
- Bagliano, F.C. e Bertola, G. (2006): "Models for Dynamic Macroeconomics”, Oxford Economic Press
The same rules applied to attending students.
Written examination