Course description
Title of the Teaching Unit
Economie
Code of the Teaching Unit
31DCG10
Academic year
2024 - 2025
Cycle
Number of credits
5
Number of hours
60
Quarter
1
Weighting
Site
Anjou
Teaching language
French
Teacher in charge
DUTERME Tom
Objectives and contribution to the program
This course has a double objective. The course is designed to provide students with the basic concepts and tools, both in macroeconomics and microeconomics, which will be essential for understanding the mainstream economic reasoning and the economic environment of a company or a sector in general. The course also aims to develop the student's critical mind towards the economic discipline and towards the economic system, and intends to teach him/her to think "like a 21st century economist", i.e. by taking into consideration the social and ecological stakes that our societies are facing today. This is why the course aims to be pluralistic. On the one hand, the course will present the key concepts of economics, starting from concrete questions and problems such as the history of capitalism, environmental problems or financial instability. On the other hand, it will include a guided and reflective reading of a portfolio of texts written in clear and concise style by major economists (Khladoun, Smith, Sen, Krugman, Raworth).
Objectives in terms of knowledge
The student will:
- Be able to define and use the basic economic concepts (such as market mechanisms, inflation, unemployment, different economic policies, the role of interest rates and exchange rates...);
- Understand the main drivers of economic policies (fiscal, monetary).
- Recognize different conceptions and models of the economy in a pluralistic perspective.
Objectives in terms of know-how
The student should be able to:
- Use the concepts seen in the course to analyse essential and current economic issues in a reflective and critical manner;
- Integrate the different concepts by demonstrating the ability to make links between the different parts of the course in order to carry out a global analysis;
- Adapt theories to particular assumptions and draw full consequences in economic analysis;
- Construct rigorous economic reasoning in a given situation.
Critical thinking objectives
The aim of this course is for students to be able to synthesise, analyse, reflect and position themselves critically in relation to certain economic situations, using their (minimal) mathematical, historical and economic background.
Prerequisites and corequisites
Basic mathematical tools, knowledge of French.
Content
I. "L'économie", between economics and economy
II. At the origins of capitalisms
III. The economic functioning through a neoclassical prism
IV. The economic globalization
V. Finance and money
VI. Environmental and ecological economics
VII. The social embeddedness of the economy
Teaching methods
This course is given in French, in the first four months in person (3 hours per week, on Tuesdays from 2 to 5 pm). For students with direct access to the Master ("passerelles"), 2 methodology sessions are also planned (A.A. Methodology) given by Mrs Schrooten.
The course consists of a set of powerpoint slides posted on Moodle throughout the term. Written course materials are also available. In general, the course sessions will combine ex-cathedra lectures and in-class exercises (using Wooclap). These exercises are designed to help you learn the material (to help you understand if you have understood it correctly, to ask clarification questions).
Assessment method
The course counts for 5 credits. For students in direct access to the Master (Passerelles), 2 credits of methodology will be added (with Ms Schrooten).
Students will have to pass a certificate evaluation. This consists of a written examination, including multiple choice questions, theoretical and analytical questions on the different parts of the course, and exercises similar to those covered during the year.
For students in direct access to the Master, the mark of the methodological work (which will count for 2/7 of the total) will be added to the mark of the examination (which will count for 5/7 of the total).
References
Teaching supports
Course website on Moodle (https://moodle.ichec.be) with :
o Course slides
o Text portfolio
Bibliographic references
Several passages in the course refer to two economics textbooks:
1) The free online textbook "The Economy", produced and developed in the framework of the CORE-ECON project, by the CORE team, which brings together researchers and professors of economics from around the world (see https://www.core-econ.org ).
The manual is available free of charge (as an e-book) at this address: https://core-econ.org/the-economy/?lang=fr. This manual is accompanied by various teaching resources (documents, databases, etc.). To access these resources, you are asked to register here as a student: https://www.core-econ.org/about/?lang=fr
2) The "Grand manuel d'économie politique", published by the Association française d'économie politique (AFEP).
The passages from this manual referred to in the course slides will be posted on Moodle.