Economics

Technological advances, including product scanners, online retail, internet search engines, and satellite/remote-sensing technology, have led to an explosion in the types and quantity of data available for economic analysis. Economists study economic data using a specialized statistical toolkit known as econometrics, and data science techniques are an increasingly important part of this toolkit.

Researchers use econometrics and data science to study a wide variety of topics, such as the effects of public policy, the evolution of industry, economic forecasting, and the forces driving inequality, economic development, and the environment.

In the economics domain of the data science major, you will learn how to apply modern economic data analysis to a wide range of economic phenomena and to draw conclusions useful for economic decision making.

Domain Requirements

You will take three economics domain core courses and four courses from the electives menu.

Economics Core Courses (all three required)

course

title

quarter offered*

EC 201

Introduction to Economic Analysis: Microeconomics

Fall, Winter, Spring

EC 311

Intermediate Microeconomic Theory

Fall, Winter, Spring

EC 320

Introduction to Econometrics

Fall, Winter, Spring

Economics Electives (choose three in addition to EC 421)

course

title

quarter offered*

EC 410

Economics of Crime

Fall

EC 410

Inequality and Economic Mobility

Spring

EC 421

Introduction to Econometrics

Fall, Winter, Spring

EC 422

Economic Forecasting

Winter

EC 428

Behavioral and Experimental Economics

Fall, Spring

EC 443

Health Economics

Spring

EC 460

Theories of Industrial Organization

Fall

EC 482 or

EC 484

Economics of Globalization or Multinational Corporations

482: Fall, Winter

484: Winter