UNDERGRADUATE CURRICULA AND FACULTY 2007 – 2011 Proposed 2009 – 2013 2 Requirements for the BBA degree: Foundation Courses 40-41 Credits Core Courses 45 Credits Departmental Requirement 24 Credits Minor 15 Credits Total variable requirement for Graduation 124-125 Credits Foundation Courses Communication Skills ENG 101 ENG 102 ENG 105* ENG 106 ENG 202 Listening and Speaking Skills English Reading Skills Business English Advanced English Skills Introduction to
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ECONOMICS. “PRINCIPLES OF ECONOMICS” FIFTH OR SIXTH EDITION, BY N. GREGORY MANKIW. I. MICROECONOMICS Specific markets. Not larger measures (GDP, etc.). The idea of a market. We live in a market economy. The market is a basic idea inside the system. The idea of a market in economics would be represented in a graph. Demand: the higher the price, the lower the demand. Supply: the higher the price, the more interested in producing in market. We have one point which is the equilibrium, with a price
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Introduction to Economics: Lecture Notes Margarita Rubio IE University Fall 2012 2 3 CONTENTS 1 Introduction to Economics The Fundamentals of Economics . . . . . . . . . . . Microeconomics, Macroeconomics and Econometrics Inputs and Outputs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Opportunity Costs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Positive Economics versus Normative Economics . . The three Problems of Economics Organization . . The ten Principles in Economics . . . . . . . . . . . Economics
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------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------- Two Wheeler Industry ------------------------------------------------- A Microeconomic Analysis ------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------- -------------------------------------------------
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68 3 LEARNING OBJECTIVES After reading this chapter you should be able to: LO1 Scanning the Marketing Environment WEB 2.0 IS ALL ABOUT YOU! The Web is changing at an extraordinary pace and each new change provides more customization and convenience for you. If you use Myspace. com, Del.icio.us, Secondlife, or any one of hundreds of new products on the Web you are already part of the new world of the Web! Not long ago the Web simply provided a modern channel for traditional businesses
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LO1 Understand the organizational purposes of businesses. ACs 1.1 identifies the purposes of different types of organization. Tasks 01 Legal Structure of Business Organization: A business Organization may have three legal option or structure, they are: Sole Trader: A person who runs unincorporated business on his or her own. Sometimes it is known as "sole proprietor" or "sole practitioner". Partnership: A partnership is an association of two or more people formed for the purpose of carrying
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Kerin−Hartley−Berkowitz−Rudelius: Marketing, Eighth Edition I. Initiating the Marketing Process 3. Scanning the Marketing Environment © The McGraw−Hill Companies, 2005 Kerin−Hartley−Berkowitz−Rudelius: Marketing, Eighth Edition I. Initiating the Marketing Process 3. Scanning the Marketing Environment © The McGraw−Hill Companies, 2005 CHAPTER 3 SCANNING THE MARKETING ENVIRONMENT IT’S SHOW TIME! Don’t blink, because the world of entertainment is changing faster than
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Examiners’ commentaries 2013 Examiners’ commentaries 2013 EC1002 Introduction to economics Important note This commentary reflects the examination and assessment arrangements for this course in the academic year 2012–13. In 2014 the examination will be conducted in two parts. The rubric for Part I will read as follows: This is Part I of the examination which consists of Multiple Choice Questions. You have 90 minutes and you should attempt to answer ALL the questions. Each question has four
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dermot.leahy@nuim.ie. z Address for Correspondence: Department of Economics, University of Oxford, Manor Road Building, Oxford, OX1 3UQ, U.K.; tel.: +44 (0)1865-271085; e-mail: peter.neary@economics.ox.ac.uk. 1 Introduction Oligopoly means competition among the few, and the study of markets with a relatively small number of large …rms is an
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Chapter Two The Production Possibility Model, Trade, and Globalization Learning Objectives After you teach the material in this chapter, your students should be able to do the following: 1. Demonstrate opportunity cost with a production possibility curve. 2. State the principle of increasing marginal opportunity cost. 3. Relate the concept of comparative advantage to the production possibility cure. 4. State how, through comparative advantage and trade, countries
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