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Lehrveranstaltungen
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V/Ü: Advanced Macroeconomics: Advanced Macroeconomics -
- Dozent/in:
- Mishael Milakovic
- Angaben:
- Vorlesung, 2 SWS, ECTS: 6
- Termine:
- Di, 12:00 - 14:00, KÄ7/00.10
- Voraussetzungen / Organisatorisches:
- Mikro- und Makroökonomik I und II
- Inhalt:
- This course deals with a variety of advanced
topics in macroeconomic theory, including theo-
ries of long-run growth and short-run income fluc
tuations. A crucial aspect of the course is to
move beyond standard texts and introduce student
s to the possibly most challenging problem
facing macroeconomic methodology today: the theory
of aggregation. We will consider recent
developments in statistical equilibrium theory,
which is particularly suitable for studying prob-
lems that arise from the aggregation of many
agents, and centers around the idea of an equilib-
rium distribution in economic variables. Idea
lly, students will conduct th
eir own data explora-
tion exercises, using for instance Mathematica and
its curated data sources (or any other statis-
tical/mathematical software and databases) to
look for distributional regularities in macroeco-
nomic variables within or
across countries, and re
port on their discoveries.
The objective of the course is to equip student
s with a critical unders
tanding of contemporary
macroeconomic issues, as witnessed for instan
ce by the current European
sovereign debt cri-
ses, and to provide them with a methodologica
l toolkit suitable for understanding the dynam-
ics of complex systems. Lectures are in English.
- Empfohlene Literatur:
- D.
R
OMER
, Advanced Macroeconomics, McGraw-Hill, 1998.
W.
W
EIDLICH
, Sociodynamics: A Systematic Approach
to Mathematical Modeling in the So-
cial Sciences, Dover, 2000.
M.
A
OKI AND
H.
Y
OSHIKAWA
, Reconstructing Macroeconomics: A Perspective from Statistical
Physics and Combinatorial St
ochastic Processes, Cambri
dge University Press, 2007.
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V/Ü: Makroökonomik I: Makroökonomik I -
- Dozent/in:
- Mishael Milakovic
- Angaben:
- Vorlesung, 2 SWS, Frühstudium
- Termine:
- Mo, 16:00 - 18:00, F21/01.57
keine Lehrveranstaltung am 10. November 2014
- Inhalt:
- Diese Veranstaltung führt in die Grundmethoden
der Makroökonomie ein und zeigt auf, wie diese
auf konkrete wirtschaftspolitische Fragestellunge
n angewendet werden
können. Behandelt werden
u.a. die wechselseitigen Beziehungen zwisch
en Güter-, Geld- und Finanzmärkten, die
Bestimmungsfaktoren der Arbeit
slosigkeit in der kurzen und
langen Frist, die Bedeutung der
Kapitalakkumulation und des technischen Fortschri
tts für das Wachstum einer Volkswirtschaft,
sowie die Wirkungsweisen verschiedene
r wirtschaftspolitischer Maßnahmen.
- Die kurze Frist (Güter-, Geld- und Finanzmärkte und das IS-LM Modell),
- Die mittlere Frist (Arbeitsmarkt, AS-AD Modell, Phillipskurve und Inflation)
- Die lange Frist (Wachstum, Aufbau von Kapital und technischer Fortschritt)
Die Studierenden sollen lernen, aktuelle Fragen
anhand der verschiedenen
Modelle zu analysieren
und diese Modelle auf konkrete wirtschaft
spolitische Fragestellungen anzuwenden.
- Empfohlene Literatur:
- O. Blanchard u. G. Illing, Makroökonomie, Pearson, aktuelle Auflage.
J. Forster et al., Übungen zur Makro
ökonomie, Pearson, aktuelle Auflage.
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V/Ü: Systemic Risk, Regulation and Stability 1: Systemic Risk, Regulation and Stability 1 -
- Dozent/in:
- Mishael Milakovic
- Angaben:
- Vorlesung, 2 SWS
- Termine:
- Do, 12:00 - 14:00, F21/03.81
- Voraussetzungen / Organisatorisches:
- Mikroökonomik I&II, Methoden
der Statistik I & II
- Inhalt:
- This two-part sequence deals with the risks th
at emanate from modern financial markets and
their regulation. The central question is how thes
e risks, their regulation, and the institutional
framework itself can actually contribute to the cr
eation of “systemic” risk, resulting in historical-
ly recurring economy-wide crises.
The first course in the sequence
takes a closer look at the challe
nges that monetary policy faces
in light of endogenous money creation, which are
compounded by the presence of derivative se-
curities that allow for the synthe
tic replication of traditional ba
nk loans. We will consider wheth-
er or how banks’ off-balance sheet transactions
can circumvent the nationa
l regulatory and taxa-
tion frameworks, and what the implications for th
e respective national central banks are in their
function as so-called lende
rs of last resort. A second important
aspect of this course deals with
financial innovation in the syndica
tion of loans or other debt
obligations (ABS
, MBS, CDO,
CLO), and their role in the recent crisis.
The main purpose of the course is to familiarize
students with the basic notion of synthetic repli-
cation in financial markets, and to carefully expl
ain how this replication leads to new challenges
for central bank policy and financ
ial regulation. The importance of
“cheap liquidity” in financial
crises is emphasized throughout the c
ourse. Lectures are in English.
- Empfohlene Literatur:
- P.
H
OWELLS AND
K.
B
AIN
, The Economics of Money, Banking
and Finance, Prentice Hall, 2008
(4th edition).
F.S.
M
ISHKIN AND
S.G.
E
AKINS
, Financial Markets and Institutions, Pearson, 2012 (7th edition).
S.
N
EFTCI
, Principles of Financial Engin
eering, Elsevier AP, 2008 (2nd edition).
C.M.
R
EINHART AND
K.S.
R
OGOFF
, This Time Is Different, Princeton UP, 2009.
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