ECON 490

Fall 2017 All Classes

All Classes

Credit: 3 OR 4 hours.

Treatment of special topics in economics.

3 undergraduate hours. 4 graduate hours. May be repeated in the same term to a maximum of 6 undergraduate hours or 8 graduate hours. May be repeated in separate terms to a maximum of 9 undergraduate hours or 8 graduate hours. Prerequisite: ECON 302 or consent of instructor.

ECON 490 class schedule data for fall 2017
CRN Type Section Time Day Location Instructor Section Details
66575
Lecture-Discussion
A3
9:30AM -10:50AM
MW
106 David Kinley Hall
Osman, A
Part of Term:
1
Date Range:
08/28/17-12/13/17
Credit:
3 hours
Section Title:
Econ of Poverty Alleviation
Section Info:
This class will study what works, what does not, and why, in the fight against poverty in developing countries. The course will have a strong methodological and analytical component, specifically focusing on articulating the why behind interventions and policies, and the how behind establishing evidence on the effectiveness of specific interventions and policies. The class will also discuss some fundamentals of behavioral economics, and learn how and when to apply such ideas to policy and program design. The course will focus on interventions and policies that apply to households, small firms, and farms with particular but not exclusive focus on four sections: microfinance, health, agriculture, and education. ********RESTRICTED TO ECON-LAS MAJORS. At this time, we do not plan on lifting the restriction. READ MORE INFORMATION ABOUT OUR COURSES, RESTRICTIONS, AND OVERRIDES~ ECON COURSE GUIDE: http://go.economics.illinois.edu/CoursesUndergrad
Restriction(s):
Restricted to students in the Economics department.
Restricted to Undergrad - Urbana-Champaign.
66576
Lecture-Discussion
A4
9:30AM -10:50AM
MW
106 David Kinley Hall
Osman, A
Part of Term:
1
Date Range:
08/28/17-12/13/17
Credit:
4 hours
Section Title:
Econ of Poverty Alleviation
Section Info:
This class will study what works, what does not, and why, in the fight against poverty in developing countries. The course will have a strong methodological and analytical component, specifically focusing on articulating the why behind interventions and policies, and the how behind establishing evidence on the effectiveness of specific interventions and policies. The class will also discuss some fundamentals of behavioral economics, and learn how and when to apply such ideas to policy and program design. The course will focus on interventions and policies that apply to households, small firms, and farms with particular but not exclusive focus on four sections: microfinance, health, agriculture, and education.
Restriction(s):
Restricted to Graduate - Urbana-Champaign.
59651
Lecture-Discussion
AA3
2:00PM -3:20PM
MW
215 David Kinley Hall
Saenz Munoz, L
Part of Term:
1
Date Range:
08/28/17-12/13/17
Credit:
3 hours
Section Title:
History of Modern Econ Thought
Section Info:
This course is about the history of ideas in economics to help the students to understand and appreciate the intellectual development that have shaped the world as we know it. The first half of the course will be devoted to the era of mercantilism, followed by the school of the Physiocrats, and then covering the ideas of what Keynes coined as “classical economists”, such as Smith, Hume, Malthus, Stuart Mill, Ricardo, and Marx, among others. The second half of the course will start from Keynes and Keynesianism (yes! they are different), followed by the monetarists up to the Lucas critique and the rational expectations revolution. The neoclassical synthesis and its origins will serve as a bridge to move from "classical" to "modern" economic thought. Finally, the course will explore the impact of the history of ideas in the current macro-development literature. A reflection on the methodological aspects of economics as a science will take place during the semester as well, probably at the beginning of the course. In the end, this is nothing but a story of scientific revolutions with several paradigms opposing each other, and influencing the economic policy that has transformed the fate of nations; As Keynes wrote in the first pages of his General Theory (1936), "the ideas of economists (...) are more powerful than is commonly understood. Indeed, the world is ruled by little else". RESTRICTED TO ECON-LAS MAJORS. At this time, we do not plan on lifting the restriction. READ MORE INFORMATION ABOUT OUR COURSES, RESTRICTIONS, AND OVERRIDES~ ECON COURSE GUIDE: http://go.economics.illinois.edu/CoursesUndergrad
Restriction(s):
Restricted to students in the Economics department.
Restricted to Undergrad - Urbana-Champaign.
66580
Lecture-Discussion
B3
9:30AM -10:50AM
MW
209 David Kinley Hall
Lee, J
Part of Term:
1
Date Range:
08/28/17-12/13/17
Credit:
3 hours
Section Title:
Financial Econometrics
Section Info:
This course is an introduction to econometric modeling in empirical/computational finance. The course seeks to understand empirical properties of financial data. We also study statistical/probabilistic models behind these stylized facts. First, we review probability/statistics and time series concepts that will be useful to understand financial market dynamics. Then some popular econometric models and estimation methods will be investigated. Both analytical problem sets and data exercises will be assigned as homework, in order to enhance our theoretical and practical skills. ********RESTRICTED TO ECON-LAS MAJORS. At this time, we do not plan on lifting the restriction. READ MORE INFORMATION ABOUT OUR COURSES, RESTRICTIONS, AND OVERRIDES~ ECON COURSE GUIDE: http://go.economics.illinois.edu/CoursesUndergrad
Restriction(s):
Restricted to students in the Economics department.
Restricted to Undergrad - Urbana-Champaign.
66864
Lecture-Discussion
B4
9:30AM -10:50AM
MW
209 David Kinley Hall
Lee, J
Part of Term:
1
Date Range:
08/28/17-12/13/17
Special Approval:
Departmental Approval Required
Credit:
4 hours
Section Title:
Financial Econometrics
Section Info:
***********RESTRICTED TO MSPE (ECON MASTERS) STUDENTS.************* This course is an introduction to econometric modeling in empirical/computational finance. The course seeks to understand empirical properties of financial data. We also study statistical/probabilistic models behind these stylized facts. First, we review probability/statistics and time series concepts that will be useful to understand financial market dynamics. Then some popular econometric models and estimation methods will be investigated. Both analytical problem sets and data exercises will be assigned as homework, in order to enhance our theoretical and practical skills.
Restriction(s):
Restricted to Graduate - Urbana-Champaign. Restricted to MS:Economics:Policy Econ -UIUC.
69172
Lecture-Discussion
BB3
3:30PM -4:50PM
MW
115 David Kinley Hall
Shakiba, M
Part of Term:
1
Date Range:
08/28/17-12/13/17
Credit:
3 hours
Section Title:
Game Theory
Section Info:
This course is the introduction of game theory and strategic decision making. We will cover basic concepts and topics in modern game theory, such as Nash equilibrium, dominance, voting, bargaining, auction, adverse selection, etc, which have broad applications in economics, politics, psychology, and everyday life. RESTRICTED TO ECON-LAS. At this time, we do not plan on lifting the restriction. READ MORE INFORMATION ABOUT OUR COURSES, RESTRICTIONS, AND OVERRIDES~ ECON COURSE GUIDE: http://go.economics.illinois.edu/CoursesUndergrad
Restriction(s):
Restricted to students in the Economics department.
Restricted to Undergrad - Urbana-Champaign.
66592
Lecture-Discussion
C3
2:00PM -3:20PM
MW
113 David Kinley Hall
McDermott, E
Part of Term:
1
Date Range:
08/28/17-12/13/17
Credit:
3 hours
Section Title:
Cost-Benefit Analysis
Section Info:
Cost-Benefit Analysis builds upon the principles and tools you learned in Intermediate Microeconomics. In this course, you will learn to analyze changes in welfare in various market settings such as monopolistic and perfectly competitive markets. You will also learn how to account for uncertainty when weighing costs and benefits as well as how to evaluate potential distributional effects in a weighted cost-benefit analysis. The strategies learned in this class can be used by governments to choose which policies to implement, in court cases to determine what damage awards are appropriate, and for firms to properly value assets for purchase or sale. ********RESTRICTED TO ECON-LAS MAJORS. At this time, we do not plan on lifting the restriction. READ MORE INFORMATION ABOUT OUR COURSES, RESTRICTIONS, AND OVERRIDES~ ECON COURSE GUIDE: http://go.economics.illinois.edu/CoursesUndergrad
Restriction(s):
Restricted to students in the Economics department.
Restricted to Undergrad - Urbana-Champaign.
66595
Lecture-Discussion
D3
11:00AM -12:20PM
MW
209 David Kinley Hall
Powers, E
Part of Term:
1
Date Range:
08/28/17-12/13/17
Credit:
3 hours
Section Title:
Women in the Economy
Section Info:
In this course, we apply economic models of the labor market and household organization and production to a wide range of important topics, including marriage, fertility, discrimination, and work-family policies. Along the way, we ponder questions like: What are the pros and cons of using the family leave benefits offered by your employer? If women ‘leaned in’, would they be paid more? Why do Millenials appear to value marriage less than the previous generations, and is there anything wrong with that? Should women be rewarded for their looks? And should men be rewarded for being tall? This course will help you better understand society and your own life choices while you hone your economic skills by thinking rigorously about important real-world problems.
Restriction(s):
Restricted to students in the Economics department.
Restricted to Undergrad - Urbana-Champaign.
66869
Lecture-Discussion
D4
11:00AM -12:20PM
MW
209 David Kinley Hall
Powers, E
Part of Term:
1
Date Range:
08/28/17-12/13/17
Special Approval:
Departmental Approval Required
Credit:
4 hours
Section Title:
Women in the Economy
Section Info:
*****************RESTRICTED TO MSPE (ECON MASTERS) STUDENTS.*********** In this course, we apply economic models of the labor market and household organization and production to a wide range of important topics, including marriage, fertility, discrimination, and work-family policies. Along the way, we ponder questions like: What are the pros and cons of using the family leave benefits offered by your employer? If women ‘leaned in’, would they be paid more? Why do Millenials appear to value marriage less than the previous generations, and is there anything wrong with that? Should women be rewarded for their looks? And should men be rewarded for being tall? This course will help you better understand society and your own life choices while you hone your economic skills by thinking rigorously about important real-world problems.
Restriction(s):
Restricted to Graduate - Urbana-Champaign. Restricted to MS:Economics:Policy Econ -UIUC.
66596
Lecture-Discussion
E3
2:00PM -3:20PM
MW
106 David Kinley Hall
Das, S
Part of Term:
1
Date Range:
08/28/17-12/13/17
Credit:
3 hours
Section Title:
Econ of War, Terror & Conflict
Section Info:
The course aims to cover three inter-related topics: inter-country way, internal conflicts (including civil war and ethnic conflicts), and terrorism. It would discuss why countries may go to or prepare for war at phenomenal economic cost when negotiated settlement is an option, choice and efficiency of alternative methods of raising an army and economic costs of war, determinants of internal conflicts such as inequality, ethnic diversity, poverty and macroeconomic shocks, and their characteristics, causes and patterns of terrorism, trade off between defensive and offensive counter-terrorism strategies and economic impacts of terrorism. ********RESTRICTED TO ECON-LAS MAJORS. At this time, we do not plan on lifting the restriction. READ MORE INFORMATION ABOUT OUR COURSES, RESTRICTIONS, AND OVERRIDES~ ECON COURSE GUIDE: http://go.economics.illinois.edu/CoursesUndergrad
Restriction(s):
Restricted to students in the Economics department.
Restricted to Undergrad - Urbana-Champaign.
66610
Lecture-Discussion
F3
9:30AM -10:50AM
TR
115 David Kinley Hall
Sun, Y
Part of Term:
1
Date Range:
08/28/17-12/13/17
Credit:
3 hours
Section Title:
Employee Comp. & Incentives
Section Info:
Employee Compensation and Incentives: Employee compensation is a critical tool for organizations to attract, retain, and motivate its workforce. The course introduces major principles in compensation design and examines the incentives embedded in compensation system. Topics include forms of pay, incentive theory, pay structure, pay-for-performance, and employee benefits. Students are expected to develop skills to design a compensation plan and evaluate compensation practices. Prerequisites: ECON 302 & ECON 202 (or basic-level statistics course). ********RESTRICTED TO ECON-LAS MAJORS. At this time, we do not plan on lifting the restriction. READ MORE INFORMATION ABOUT OUR COURSES, RESTRICTIONS, AND OVERRIDES~ ECON COURSE GUIDE: http://go.economics.illinois.edu/CoursesUndergrad
Restriction(s):
Restricted to students in the Economics department.
Restricted to Undergrad - Urbana-Champaign.
66877
Lecture-Discussion
G3
2:00PM -3:20PM
TR
209 David Kinley Hall
Sun, Y
Part of Term:
1
Date Range:
08/28/17-12/13/17
Credit:
3 hours
Section Title:
Econ of the Workplace
Section Info:
Economics of the Workplace: The course focuses on the application of economic theory to solve practical personnel issues at workplace. Examines a range of topics of particular relevance to managing workforce at the organizational level, including recruitment, personnel selection, employee training, managing turnover, job design, performance evaluation and incentive compensation. Develops students’ ability to apply economic theories and analysis for managerial decision making at workplace. Prerequisites: ECON 302 & ECON 202 (or basic-level statistics course) ********RESTRICTED TO ECON-LAS MAJORS. At this time, we do not plan on lifting the restriction. READ MORE INFORMATION ABOUT OUR COURSES, RESTRICTIONS, AND OVERRIDES~ ECON COURSE GUIDE: http://go.economics.illinois.edu/CoursesUndergrad
Restriction(s):
Restricted to students in the Economics department.
Restricted to Undergrad - Urbana-Champaign.
66647
Lecture-Discussion
H3
9:30AM -10:50AM
TR
113 David Kinley Hall
Zhao, R
Part of Term:
1
Date Range:
08/28/17-12/13/17
Credit:
3 hours
Section Title:
Monetary Economics
Section Info:
Financial System & Monetary Economics: This course focuses on the money side of macroeconomics. Close to two thirds of the class deals with financial markets, instruments traded on financial markets, and financial intermediaries. The remaining class time is devoted to central bank behavior, exchange rate, and monetary policies. ********RESTRICTED TO ECON-LAS MAJORS. At this time, we do not plan on lifting the restriction. READ MORE INFORMATION ABOUT OUR COURSES, RESTRICTIONS, AND OVERRIDES~ ECON COURSE GUIDE: http://go.economics.illinois.edu/CoursesUndergrad
Restriction(s):
Restricted to students in the Economics department.
Restricted to Undergrad - Urbana-Champaign.
66608
Lecture-Discussion
I3
9:30AM -10:50AM
TR
209 David Kinley Hall
DiIanni, I
Part of Term:
1
Date Range:
08/28/17-12/13/17
Credit:
3 hours
Section Title:
American Economic History
Section Info:
This course is restricted to Economics Majors. Read more about Economics Course Restrictions and Overrides: http://www.economics.illinois.edu/undergrad/resources/current/ This course is a survey of the history of the American economy from the colonial era to the present. We will study the features and development of the American economy and examine the watershed events that have transformed it over its history. ********RESTRICTED TO ECON-LAS MAJORS. At this time, we do not plan on lifting the restriction. READ MORE INFORMATION ABOUT OUR COURSES, RESTRICTIONS, AND OVERRIDES~ ECON COURSE GUIDE: http://go.economics.illinois.edu/CoursesUndergrad
Restriction(s):
Restricted to students in the Economics department.
Restricted to Undergrad - Urbana-Champaign.
66622
Lecture-Discussion
J3
2:00PM -3:20PM
MW
209 David Kinley Hall
Feld, B
Kleemans, M
Part of Term:
1
Date Range:
08/28/17-12/13/17
Credit:
3 hours
Section Title:
Migration
Section Info:
This class deals with the inter-relationships between economic development and migration. After introducing the basic concepts of poverty and inequality, between as well as within countries, this course focuses on the role that migration and population growth play in the process of economic development. The causes of migration and its consequences are examined at national and international levels together with their policy implications, including those related to urbanization, brain drain, and labor market impacts of immigration. A range of migration forms is discussed, including international and internal migration, permanent and temporary migration, legal and illegal migration, as well as forced migration and refugees. ********RESTRICTED TO ECON-LAS MAJORS. At this time, we do not plan on lifting the restriction. READ MORE INFORMATION ABOUT OUR COURSES, RESTRICTIONS, AND OVERRIDES~ ECON COURSE GUIDE: http://go.economics.illinois.edu/CoursesUndergrad
Restriction(s):
Restricted to students in the Economics department.
Restricted to Undergrad - Urbana-Champaign.
66611
Lecture-Discussion
K3
11:00AM -12:20PM
TR
113 David Kinley Hall
Arvan, L
Part of Term:
1
Date Range:
08/28/17-12/13/17
Credit:
3 hours
Section Title:
Econ of Organizations
Section Info:
The course focuses on the dual problems of first, providing coherence to activities within the organization and second, providing suitable motivation for organization members. Different members of the organization have different pieces of information. An effective organization addresses the dual problems by managing well the information asymmetries. This economics approach to organizations is compared and contrasted to non-economic approaches. ********RESTRICTED TO ECON-LAS MAJORS. At this time, we do not plan on lifting the restriction. READ MORE INFORMATION ABOUT OUR COURSES, RESTRICTIONS, AND OVERRIDES~ ECON COURSE GUIDE: http://go.economics.illinois.edu/CoursesUndergrad
Restriction(s):
Restricted to students in the Economics department.
Restricted to Undergrad - Urbana-Champaign.
66873
Lecture-Discussion
K4
11:00AM -12:20PM
TR
113 David Kinley Hall
Arvan, L
Part of Term:
1
Date Range:
08/28/17-12/13/17
Special Approval:
Departmental Approval Required
Credit:
4 hours
Section Title:
Econ of Organizations
Section Info:
******************RESTICTED TO MSPE (ECON MASTERS) STUDENTS************** The course focuses on the dual problems of first, providing coherence to activities within the organization and second, providing suitable motivation for organization members. Different members of the organization have different pieces of information. An effective organization addresses the dual problems by managing well the information asymmetries. This economics approach to organizations is compared and contrasted to non-economic approaches.
Restriction(s):
Restricted to Graduate - Urbana-Champaign.
66874
Lecture-Discussion
M3
11:00AM -12:20PM
TR
209 David Kinley Hall
Buckley, B
Part of Term:
1
Date Range:
08/28/17-12/13/17
Credit:
3 hours
Section Title:
Environmental Economics
Section Info:
Trash, climate change, overpopulation! Is humanity doomed? This class will use economics to get to the core of these issues. We will explore the market and regulatory solutions to these problems to see when they work and backfire. ********RESTRICTED TO ECON-LAS MAJORS. At this time, we do not plan on lifting the restriction. READ MORE INFORMATION ABOUT OUR COURSES, RESTRICTIONS, AND OVERRIDES~ ECON COURSE GUIDE: http://go.economics.illinois.edu/CoursesUndergrad
Restriction(s):
Restricted to students in the Economics department.
Restricted to Undergrad - Urbana-Champaign.
66613
Lecture-Discussion
N3
12:30PM -1:50PM
TR
106 David Kinley Hall
Philipps, C
Part of Term:
1
Date Range:
08/28/17-12/13/17
Credit:
3 hours
Section Title:
Economic Forecasting
Section Info:
This course provides an overview of methods for economic forecasting. Topics include linear regressions; modeling and forecasting trend and seasonality; characterizing and forecasting cycles; MA, AR, and ARMA models; forecasting with regressions; evaluating and combining forecasts. Advanced topics such as unit roots, stochastic trends, ARIMA models, and smoothing will be covered as time permits. Students need to write computer program codes (MATLAB, Eviews, or R) to do forecasting. ********RESTRICTED TO ECON-LAS MAJORS. At this time, we do not plan on lifting the restriction. READ MORE INFORMATION ABOUT OUR COURSES, RESTRICTIONS, AND OVERRIDES~ ECON COURSE GUIDE: http://go.economics.illinois.edu/CoursesUndergrad
Restriction(s):
Restricted to students in the Economics department.
Restricted to Undergrad - Urbana-Champaign.
66600
Lecture-Discussion
V3
3:30PM -4:50PM
MW
106 David Kinley Hall
Gao, X
Part of Term:
1
Date Range:
08/28/17-12/13/17
Credit:
3 hours
Section Title:
Financial Economics
Section Info:
This course discusses major topics in corporate finance: firms make decisions to increase the value of the firm for their shareholders. In the first part, we will evaluate investment projects and decide whether the firm should take or reject a project. We will also learn how to value bonds and stocks. In the second part, we will study the relationship between risk and returns. Capital asset pricing model, arbitrage and stock options will be introduced. In the third part, we will talk about firms’ capital structure and payout policy. ********RESTRICTED TO ECON-LAS MAJORS. At this time, we do not plan on lifting the restriction. READ MORE INFORMATION ABOUT OUR COURSES, RESTRICTIONS, AND OVERRIDES~ ECON COURSE GUIDE: http://go.economics.illinois.edu/CoursesUndergrad
Restriction(s):
Restricted to students in the Economics department.
Restricted to Undergrad - Urbana-Champaign.
66619
Lecture-Discussion
W3
11:00AM -12:20PM
TR
106 David Kinley Hall
Bartik, A
Part of Term:
1
Date Range:
08/28/17-12/13/17
Credit:
3 hours
Section Title:
Topics in Econometrics
Section Info:
This course will cover key techniques in applied econometric research, with a focus on causal inference. Particular emphasis will be placed on questions related to policy and program evaluation. Techniques covered will include experiments, regression and matching, instrumental variables, difference-in-differences, synthetic control, regression-discontinuity, and analysis of high-dimensional data-sets. We will discuss the properties of each of these techniques and illustrate them using examples from health policy, education policy, workforce development programs, environmental and labor market regulations, and economic development programs. Students will gain experience applying the techniques to estimate the causal impacts of different policies using real-data sets. Students will finish the course by proposing their own program evaluation. ********RESTRICTED TO ECON-LAS MAJORS. At this time, we do not plan on lifting the restriction. READ MORE INFORMATION ABOUT OUR COURSES, RESTRICTIONS, AND OVERRIDES~ ECON COURSE GUIDE: http://go.economics.illinois.edu/CoursesUndergrad
Restriction(s):
Restricted to students in the Economics department.
Restricted to Undergrad - Urbana-Champaign.
66870
Lecture-Discussion
X3
11:00AM -12:20PM
MW
115 David Kinley Hall
Grigoryan, A
Part of Term:
1
Date Range:
08/28/17-12/13/17
Credit:
3 hours
Section Title:
Monetary Economics
Section Info:
MONETARY ECONOMICS: This course focuses on the role of money in macroeconomics and financial systems. The course consists of two parts. The first part of the course will be devoted to the financial system and its components. The second part will concentrate on the role of central bank and monetary policy.********RESTRICTED TO ECON-LAS MAJORS. At this time, we do not plan on lifting the restriction. READ MORE INFORMATION ABOUT OUR COURSES, RESTRICTIONS, AND OVERRIDES~ ECON COURSE GUIDE: http://go.economics.illinois.edu/CoursesUndergrad
Restriction(s):
Restricted to students in the Economics department.
Restricted to Undergrad - Urbana-Champaign.
66602
Lecture-Discussion
Y3
3:30PM -4:50PM
TR
209 David Kinley Hall
Hurtado Martilletti, C
Part of Term:
1
Date Range:
08/28/17-12/13/17
Credit:
3 hours
Section Title:
Numerical Methods: Econonomics
Section Info:
Numerical Methods in Economics: The objective of this course is to provide students with both a theoretical understanding of numerical methods, as well as the ability to implement those methods computationally using Python. Many jobs offers nowadays require computational skills. Computer programming is not a requirement for undergraduate majors in economics, but having programming skills may help students to differentiate themselves from other job applicants. According to the Data Science Job Report 2017, most of the jobs require knowledge programming on Python. *COURSE REQUIREMENTS: Students must have knowledge of Calculus 1 (optimization) and Calculus 2 (integration). Basic knowledge of linear algebra (solving systems of equations in matrix form, eigenvalues, eigenvectors) is necessary, but a full course on linear algebra is not mandatory. Also, ECON 203 is a requirement. PERSONAL LAPTOP COMPUTER REQUIRED as students will work in class on the projects (the software is free). ********RESTRICTED TO ECON-LAS MAJORS. At this time, we do not plan on lifting the restriction. READ MORE INFORMATION ABOUT OUR COURSES, RESTRICTIONS, AND OVERRIDES~ ECON COURSE GUIDE: http://go.economics.illinois.edu/CoursesUndergrad
Restriction(s):
Restricted to students in the Economics department.
Restricted to Undergrad - Urbana-Champaign.
69169
Lecture-Discussion
Z3
3:30PM -4:50PM
TR
115 David Kinley Hall
Amini Behbahani, A
Part of Term:
1
Date Range:
08/28/17-12/13/17
Credit:
3 hours
Section Title:
Economic Growth
Section Info:
Why are some countries rich and others poor? This course will provide a theoretical and empirical examination of economic growth and income differences across countries. It will focus on both the historical experience of countries that are currently rich and the process of catch-up among poor countries. *****RESTRICTED TO ECON-LAS MAJORS. At this time, we do not plan on lifting the restriction. READ MORE INFORMATION ABOUT OUR COURSES, RESTRICTIONS, AND OVERRIDES~ ECON COURSE GUIDE: http://go.economics.illinois.edu/CoursesUndergrad
Restriction(s):
Restricted to students in the Economics department.
Restricted to Undergrad - Urbana-Champaign.
COURSE EXPLORER
Email: Course Explorer Feedback

OFFICE OF THE REGISTRAR | 901 W. Illinois Street, Urbana, Illinois 61801

Site developed by: Technology Services at Illinois | UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS URBANA-CHAMPAIGN
1102 Digital Computer Laboratory | MC-256 | Urbana, IL 61801 | phone 217-244-7000