Macroeconomics 2

This course provides an introduction to advanced macroeconomics at the undergraduate level, serving as a bridge between intermediate-level macroeconomics (covered in previous undergraduate courses) and graduate-level macroeconomics. It is intended for undergraduates who want to study advanced topics in macroeconomics in greater analytical detail. Graduates of the programs understand, reflect and apply state-of-the art theories and will master formal macroeconomic analysis, including decomposing the sources of growth and the analytics of business cycles and their stabilization. The course covers basic macroeconomic growth models such as the general Solow and endogenoues growth models as well as business cycle models.

Mary Tzaawa-Krenzler
Mary Tzaawa-Krenzler
Ph.D. student in Economics

My research focuses on information and behavioral frictions in general equilibrium models, household heterogeneity and monetary policy.