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ECONOMICS U$A , Part 2: Microeconomics

PRODUCER: Educational Film Center, in cooperation with Wharton Econometric Forecasting Associates and INTELECOM From Annenberg/CPB

PRODUCTION COMPLETED: 1985

FIRST PBS RELEASE: Summer 1986

DISCIPLINE: Macroeconomics

LESSONS/PROGRAMS: 14 half-hour programs

AVAILABLE RESOURCES: Text
  Study Guide
  Faculty Manual
  Audio Cassettes (optional)

GENERAL DESCRIPTION:

Newly updated to bring issues covered in the series up to the 21st Century, Economics U$A is a comprehensive telecourse in macroeconomics and microeconomics designed to address the sharply increasing demand for quality college economics courses in this critical field of study. The series is an absorbing documentary examination of major historic and contemporary events that have shaped 20th century American economics. Through the use of interviews, commentary and analysis, the series establishes a clear relationship between abstract economic principles and concrete human experience.

Topics include resources and scarcity, markets and prices, booms and busts, fiscal policy, inflation, supply and demand, profits and interests, exchange rates, and more.

The course programs are hosted by former CBS and ABC network correspondent David Schoumacher and Richard T. Gill, former Professor of Economics at Harvard University. Economics U$A can be offered as either a one-semester survey course in economic principles or, with the addition of the audiocassettes, as a two-semester macro- and microeconomics course sequence.

LESSON (PROGRAM) TITLES:

1. The Firm: How Can it Keep Costs Down?
2. Supply and Demand: What Sets the Price?
3. Perfect Competition and Inelastic Demand: Can the Farmer Make a Profit?
4. Economic Efficiency: What Price Controls?
5. Monopoly: Who's in Control?
6. Oligopolies: Whatever Happened to Price Competition?
7. Pollution: How Much is a Clean Environment Worth?
8. Labor and Management: How Do They Come to Terms?
9. Profits and Interest: Where is the Best Return?
10. Reducing Poverty: What Have We Done?
11. Economic Growth: Can We Keep Up the Pace?
12. Public Goods and Responsibilities: How Far Should We Go?
13. International Trade: For Whose Benefit?
14. Exchange Rates: What in the World is a Dollar Worth?




Please send comments to: Joel Martin
The Community College of Baltimore County
800 S. Rolling Road
Baltimore, MD 21228

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