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Einrichtungen >> Fakultät Sozial- und Wirtschaftswissenschaften >> Bereich Volkswirtschaftslehre >>

Lehrstuhl für Volkswirtschaftslehre, insb. Internationale Wirtschaft

 

Diplomandenseminar

Dozentinnen/Dozenten:
Mishael Milakovic, N.N.
Angaben:
[s], 2 SWS
Termine:
Zeit und Ort nach Vereinbarung

 

Doktorandenkolloquium

Dozent/in:
Mishael Milakovic
Angaben:
[k], 2 SWS
Termine:
Zeit und Ort nach Vereinbarung

 

Körpersprache verstehen und einsetzen

Dozent/in:
Ila Stuckenberg
Angaben:
[s], 2 SWS
Termine:
Einzeltermin am 15.5.2012, 11:00 - 14:00, KÄ7/01/110
Einzeltermin am 22.5.2012, Einzeltermin am 5.6.2012, Einzeltermin am 19.6.2012, Einzeltermin am 3.7.2012, 12:00 - 16:00, KÄ7/01/110
Einzeltermin am 10.7.2012, 12:00 - 15:30, KÄ7/01/110
Die Teilnehmerzahl ist auf 10 begrenzt! Bitte melden Sie sich per E-Mail unter international-economics@sowi.uni-bamberg.de an.
Voraussetzungen / Organisatorisches:
Die Teilnehmerzahl ist auf 10 begrenzt! Bitte melden Sie sich per E-Mail unter international-economics@sowi.uni-bamberg.de an.

 

Nachholklausur Systemic Risk, Regulation and Stability 1

Dozent/in:
Mishael Milakovic
Angaben:
Vorlesung, 1 SWS
Termine:
Einzeltermin am 3.8.2012, 10:00 - 12:00, F21/241

 

reserviert für Lehrstuhl Philosophie I und II

Dozent/in:
N.N.
Angaben:
Vorlesung
Termine:
Einzeltermin am 17.7.2012, 10:00 - 12:00, F21/231

 

S: Projektseminar "Behavioral and Empirical Finance"

Dozentinnen/Dozenten:
Mishael Milakovic, Ilfan Oh
Angaben:
[pjs], 2 SWS
Termine:
Einzeltermin am 3.7.2012, Einzeltermin am 17.7.2012, 16:00 - 20:00, F21/241
Beachten Sie bitte unsere Homepage!
ab 24.4.2012
Inhalt:
Im Projektseminar werden meist abwechselnd aktuelle Fragestellungen aus den Gebieten “International Finance” und “Financial Economics” behandelt. Im Bereich International Finance geht es primär um aktuelle Themen zu den Bestimmungsfaktoren der Wechsel-kurse, zur Wechselkurspolitik und zur Geldpolitik in offenen Volkswirtschaften. Im Be-reich Financial Economics werden u.a. verhaltenstheoretische Aspekte in Finanzmarkt-modellen behandelt, ebenso Modelle zur Bepreisung von Finanzderivaten, Ansätze zur Erklärung von Finanzkrisen, oder Befunde zu robusten empirischen Regelmäßigkeiten in Finanzmarktzeitreihen bzw. deren Implikationen für das Risikomanagement.
Ziel der Veranstaltung ist es, Studierende mit tiefer gehenden Fragen der Finanzmarkt-theorie und entsprechenden empirischen Befunden vertraut zu machen und sie an das wissenschaftliche Arbeiten heranzuführen.

 

S: Systemic Risk, Regulation and Stability 2

Dozent/in:
Mishael Milakovic
Angaben:
Vorlesung, 2 SWS
Termine:
Einzeltermin am 18.7.2012, 18:00 - 22:00, F21/379
ab 19.4.2012
Inhalt:
This two-part sequence deals with the risks that emanate from modern financial markets and their regulation. The central question is how these risks, their regulation, and the institutional framework itself can actually contribute to the creation of “systemic” risk, resulting in historically recurring economy-wide crises.
The second course in the sequence deals with a very recent strand of literature that approaches systemic risk from the perspective of herd behavior and the institutional or network structure of financial markets. The latter shifts the traditional focus on incentive problems for financial institutions that are “too big to fail” to concepts regarding network fragility when financial institutions are “too interconnected to fail,” and also deals with the question how to characterize the fragility or resilience of networks from a statistical point of view. The main purpose of the course is to make students aware of the conceptual shortcomings in the definition of systemic risk that is inherent in traditional asset pricing theories, and to introduce them to models of herd behavior and elementary notions of the structure and functioning of complex networks. Lectures are in English.

 

V/Ü: International Macroeconomics I

Dozent/in:
Mishael Milakovic
Angaben:
Vorlesung, 2 SWS
Termine:
Di, 14:00 - 16:00, F21/241
Einzeltermin am 16.5.2012, Einzeltermin am 23.5.2012, 18:00 - 20:00, F21/379
Einzeltermin am 30.7.2012, 10:00 - 12:00, F21/241
Inhalt:
This course deals with the two most important traditional models of exchange rate deter-mination and open economy macroeconomics, which start from different pre-analytical visions and thus arrive at very distinct open economy policy prescriptions. We start from basic concepts of exchange rate determination, like purchasing power parity and (un)covered interest rate parity, and review the basic accounting principles underlying the balance of payments. Then we move on to standard Keynesian models and to a variety of monetarist approaches to the balance of payments. Topics include the following:
  • Fixed and floating exchange rate regimes in Mundell-Fleming-type models
  • Monetarist flex- and sticky-price approaches to the balance of payments
  • Exchange rate ‘overshooting’
  • Portfolio balance approach to exchange rate determination
  • Foreign exchange market efficiency and the ‘risk premium’

The main purpose of the course is to make students aware of the different strands of eco-nomic thought in international macroeconomics, and to emphasize how they arrive at very different policy prescriptions regarding balance of payments equilibrium, and mone-tary and fiscal policy issues in general. In particular, students should be able to under-stand why various pressure groups favor certain models or are strictly opposed to others, and where the various models meet their empirical limitations. Lectures are in English.

 

V/Ü: Introduction to European and International Economics

Dozentinnen/Dozenten:
Philipp Mundt, Niels Förster
Angaben:
Übung, 2 SWS
Termine:
Mo, 16:00 - 18:00, F21/135
Do, 14:00 - 16:00, F21/241
Übungsbeginn wird in der Vorlesung bekannt gegeben!
ab 30.4.2012

 

V/Ü: Introduction to European and International Economics

Dozent/in:
Mishael Milakovic
Angaben:
Vorlesung, 2 SWS
Termine:
Do, 10:00 - 12:00, F21/135
Übungsbeginn wird in der Vorlesung bekannt gegeben!
Inhalt:
Gegenstand der Veranstaltung: Today’s economies are increasingly linked through trade and financial flows, with important consequences for national employment, consumption, and firm investment that are typically summarized under the colloquial but rather vague term of “globalization.” Its consequences are severely debated and often take center stage in national political programs. This course aims at providing a comprehensive (albeit introductory) overview of fundamental issues in the theory of international economics and finance, taking into account various contemporary debates on the costs and benefits of globalization. Topics include (but are not limited to) the following: i) classical theories of international trade (Smith, Ricardo), ii) standard theories of trade (Heckscher-Ohlin, gravitation models), iii) the political economy of trade, iv) basic concepts of balance of payments accounting and exchange rate determination, v) macroeconomic implications of fixed and floating exchange rate regimes.

 

V/Ü: Makroökonomik I: Übung A zu Makroökonomik I

Dozent/in:
Niels Förster
Angaben:
Übung, 2 SWS
Termine:
Di, 14:00 - 16:00, F21/383
ab 24.4.2012

 

V/Ü: Makroökonomik I: Übung B zu Makroökonomik I

Dozent/in:
Philipp Mundt
Angaben:
Übung, 2 SWS
Termine:
Fr, 10:00 - 12:00, KÄ7/00.110
ab 27.4.2012

 

V/Ü: Makroökonomik I: Übung C zu Makroökonomik I

Dozent/in:
Niels Förster
Angaben:
Übung, 2 SWS
Termine:
Mi, 12:00 - 14:00, F21/241
ab 25.4.2012

 

V/Ü: Makroökonomik I: Übung D zu Makroökonomik I

Dozent/in:
Philipp Mundt
Angaben:
Übung, 2 SWS
Termine:
Fr, 12:00 - 14:00, KÄ7/00.110
ab 27.4.2012

 

V/Ü:The Economic Nature of the Firm 2

Dozent/in:
Ilfan Oh
Angaben:
Vorlesung, 2 SWS
Termine:
Fr, 12:00 - 14:00, FMA/007
Einzeltermin am 27.7.2012, 12:00 - 13:00, F21/218
Inhalt:
Dr. Ilfan Oh BA The Economic Nature of the Firm 2 This course is the second part of a two-semester sequence on the economic nature of the firm. The objective of the course is to consider the financial aspects of firm behavior and their relation to the capital market structure. The course starts with a review of traditional approaches, including mean-variance portfolio theory, the capital asset pricing model, and the Modigliani-Miller theorem regarding the irrelevance of firms financing decisions. After examining the theoretical implications proposed by these approaches, the course focuses on the following topics: Attributes of perfect capital markets Determinants of firm financing and investment decisions Firm valuation and capital structure Dividend policy Efficient market hypothesis Financing and investment behavior in the presence of capital market imperfections The course also deals with empirical aspects regarding the above topics. Upon completion of the course, students should be equipped with a collection of tools to analyze the diversified aspects of firm financing decisions, the complex properties of capital markets, and the possible impact of firm financing and investment behavior upon macroeconomic activity. The course is taught in English.



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