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Vorlesungsverzeichnis >> Fakultät Sozial- und Wirtschaftswissenschaften >> Bachelor-/Master-Studiengänge Wirtschaftswissenschaften >> Master Betriebswirtschaftslehre, Internationale Betriebswirtschaftslehre, Wirtschaftspädagogik, European Economic Studies (EES) >>
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Volkswirtschaftliche Fächer
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Vorbesprechung Proseminar -
- Dozent/in:
- Lisa Planer-Friedrich
- Angaben:
- Proseminar
- Termine:
- Einzeltermin am 14.10.2015, 18:00 - 20:00, F21/02.31, F21/02.41, F21/03.03, F21/03.80
Einzeltermin am 9.12.2015, 18:00 - 22:00, F21/02.55, F21/03.80
Einzeltermin am 9.12.2015, 16:00 - 18:00, F21/03.80
Einzeltermin am 4.2.2016, 14:00 - 16:00, F21/02.24
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Angewandte Wirtschaftsforschung
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V/Ü: Advanced Macroeconomics -
- Dozent/in:
- Christian Proaño
- Angaben:
- Vorlesung, 2 SWS, ECTS: 6
- Termine:
- Di, 10:00 - 12:00, F21/01.35
- Inhalt:
- Macroeconomic analysis is primarily concerned with two issues: (i) developing positive models in order to understand the dynamics of key macroeconomic variables such as output, employment, unemployment, inflation, interest rates, etc.; and (ii) deriving normative prescriptions for macroeconomic policymaking, in particular regarding the proper setting of fiscal and monetary policies. The course begins with a discussion of empirical facts regarding business cycles and growth to be explained by macroeconomic models and then provides an example of the role of economic policy as a macroeconomic stabilization mechanism based on a traditional reduced-form model of the macro-economy. The second part of the course deals in more detail with several building blocks for macroeconomic models based on intertemporal optimization along the neoclassical tradition. The third part of the course focuses in contrast on the caveats of this theoretical framework, as well as on the alternative modeling approaches.
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Empirische Mikroökonomik
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Neue Ökonomische Geographie -
- Dozent/in:
- Stephan Brunow
- Angaben:
- Vorlesung, 2 SWS, ECTS: 6
- Termine:
- Einzeltermin am 19.10.2015, Einzeltermin am 26.10.2015, Einzeltermin am 9.11.2015, Einzeltermin am 16.11.2015, Einzeltermin am 23.11.2015, Einzeltermin am 30.11.2015, Einzeltermin am 7.12.2015, Einzeltermin am 14.12.2015, 12:00 - 16:00, F21/03.01
- Inhalt:
- Die Neue Ökonomische Geographie (NEG) verbindet die Standortwahl von Unternehmen mit der Wohn- und Arbeitsortwahl der Arbeitskräfte und leitet ein im volkswirtschaftlichen Sinne totales Gleichgewicht ab. Die NEG kann trotz einer einfachen Modellierung Phänomene wie die Konzentration von Industrien und persistente regionale Disparitäten, wie sie sich sowohl innerhalb Deutschlands, wie auch im ganzen europäischen Raum beobachten lassen, erklären.
Der entscheidende Fakt hierbei ist, dass es sich um stabile Gleichgewichte handeln kann. Die Veranstaltung widmet sich den Modellen des intra-industriellen Handels und insbesondere dem theoretischen Fundament der NEG, geht auf Modellvarianten ein und diskutiert die auftretenden Effekte und deren Implikationen auf regionale Gleichgewichte. Dabei wird auch der Blick auf die politische Relevanz gerichtet.
Zentrale Themengebiete sind:
• Steigende Skalenerträge und intra-industrieller Handel
• Der Einfluss von Handels- und Transportkosten
• Standortwahl von Unternehmen
• Agglomeration und Dispersion im Raum
• Migration als Ausgleichsmechanismus
• Politische Implikationen
- Empfohlene Literatur:
- Krugman, P. (1991), Geography and Trade, Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press.
Fujta, M., P. Krugman, und A. Venables (1999), The Spatial Economy, Cambridge, MIT Press.
Baldwin, R., R. Forslid, P. Martin, G. Ottaviano, und F. Robert-Nicoud (2004), Economic Geography & Public Policy, Princton University Press, Princeton and Oxford.
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Finanzwissenschaft
Wirtschaftstheorie
Internationale Wirtschaft
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Financial Engineering and Systemic Risk -
- Dozent/in:
- Ilfan Oh
- Angaben:
- Vorlesung, 2 SWS, ECTS: 6
- Termine:
- Mi, 18:00 - 20:00, FG1/00.08
- Inhalt:
- This course 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 first course in the sequence takes a closer look at the challenges that monetary policy faces in light of endogenous money creation, which are compounded by
the presence of derivative securities that allow for the synthetic
replication of traditional bank loans. We will consider whether or how banks’ off-balance sheet transactions can circumvent the national
regulatory and taxation frameworks, and what the implications for the respective national central banks are in their function as so-called
lenders of last resort. A second important aspect of this course deals with financial innovation in the syndication 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 replication in financial markets, and to carefully explain how this replication leads to new challenges for central bank policy and financial regulation. The importance of “cheap liquidity” in financial crises is emphasized throughout the course.
- Empfohlene Literatur:
- P. HOWELLS AND K. BAIN, The Economics of Money, Banking and Finance,
Prentice Hall, 2008 (4th edition).
F.S.MISHKIN AND S.G. EAKINS, Financial Markets and Institutions, Pearson, 2012 (7th edition).
S. NEFTCI, Principles of Financial Engineering, Elsevier AP, 2008 (2nd edition).
C.M. REINHART AND K.S. ROGOFF, This Time Is Different, Princeton UP, 2009.
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International Financial Markets -
- Dozent/in:
- Ilfan Oh
- Angaben:
- Vorlesung und Übung, 2 SWS
- Termine:
- Do, 16:00 - 18:00, F21/03.84
- Inhalt:
- This course deals with selected topics in the theory and practice of international finance, for instance dealing with the ‘three generations’ of models aimed at explaining currency crises.
Topics include (but are not limited to) the following:
• Trading volume and organization of international financial markets
• Foreign exchange markets and macroeconomic theory
• Speculation, excess volatility, and stabilization of the exchange rate
• Exchange rate target zones (such as the European Monetary System EMS)
• Exchange rate crises and speculative attacks
- Empfohlene Literatur:
- K. PILBEAM, International Finance, Palgrave Macmillan, current edition.
N. C.MARK, International Macroeconomics and Finance, Blackwell, 2001
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Internationale Wirtschaftspolitik
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