Econ101ab Birmingham Blog

This blog accompanies the econ101ab Principles of Economics course given at the University of Birmingham. The lecturers for both parts of the course (101a, microeconomics and 101b, macroeconomics) will occasionally post here on matters related to lecture material. We hope to show the relevance of the concepts we are teaching at each stage of the course for helping understand how the world works...

Friday, January 11, 2013

Another Event!

›
In addition to the Al Roth lecture on February 4th (note room has changed to Vaughan Jeffreys due to demand for the event), on January 29th...
2 comments:
Thursday, January 10, 2013

Inflation

›
On Tuesday in econ101b we looked at inflation alongside unemployment for the first time. We're going to return to these later in term in...
Tuesday, January 8, 2013

Farmer and Fiscal

›
Continuing on the theme of interesting and useful contributions by macroeconomists writing on blogs, John Quiggin is an economist based betw...
Monday, January 7, 2013

Borrowing

›
As I mentioned in today's lecture, amidst the administrative and technological chaos, this blog serves to link what we look at in the le...
Friday, January 4, 2013

GDP and indicators thereof

›
On Monday, we're going to learn about national income, the amount produced in an economy, and how we measure it - Gross Domestic Product...
Thursday, January 3, 2013

Not the Treasury View...

›
In preparing for the lectures this coming term, I've been looking over Chapters 14 to 17 in Sloman, the textbook we use. Particularly Ch...
Thursday, September 6, 2012

Marginal Revolution University!

›
If not yet, I hope to encourage you whilst you study economics to become avid readers of blogs written by economists. After all, this is one...
1 comment:
›
Home
View web version
Powered by Blogger.