MICRO AND MACRO ECONOMICS
cod. 1010935

Academic year 2024/25
1° year of course - First semester
Professors
Academic discipline
Politica economica (SECS-P/02)
Field
Economico
Type of training activity
Characterising
63 hours
of face-to-face activities
9 credits
hub: PARMA
course unit
in ENGLISH

Learning objectives

Knowledge and understanding
• The student will understand at the end of the course:
how consumers and firms make their choices
how markets work
how an economy works and how it evolves across time.

Applying knowledge and understanding
• The student will acquire the basic tools of micro- and macro-economic analysis which allow to identify the incentives driving the decisions of economic agents and the conditions characterizing the equilibrium of a market and of an economy, in different time lapses (short-run, medium-run and long-run).

Autonomous judgement
• Developing the necessary skills to evaluate the optimality of consumers and firms from the perspective of their economic objectives
• Developing the necessary skills to identify the causes of changes in the parameters characterizing the equilibrium in a single market and in the whole economy.
• Developing the necessary skills to assess the results of macroeconomic studies and of economic policies

Communication skills
• Developing the necessary skills to explain critically the results of micro and macro-economic studies and the scenarios described by economic statistics both to experts and non-experts in the field of economics

Learning ability
• Developing the necessary skills to briefly explain complex issues by means of charts and analytical formulae.

Prerequisites

In order to pass the exam you need to be able to:
Interpret the equation of a line (i.e. slope and intercept);
Manipulate a line (i.e. change the slope or the intercept);
Compute and interpret a growth rate (i.e. percent change);
Read and manipulate a graph in the Cartesian (x,y) space;
Solve systems of two equations with two unknowns.
The first exercise session will focus on the prerequisites notions listed above.
On the course e-learning website (Elly) online resources to integrate prerequisite knowledge will be available.

Course unit content

A one semester introduction to the basic principles of both microeconomics and macroeconomics. Students will be introduced to the big questions of Economics and the key ideas that define the economic way of thinking.
They will become familiar with the basic analytical tools for data representation and economic analysis. Microeconomics topics will include the basics of supply and demand, the behavior of consumers and businesses, and how markets operate. Macroeconomic topics will include the fundamental components of gross domestic product (GDP),
the problems of inflation and unemployment, and the impact of government fiscal and monetary policies.
The course's intended audience is students who did not graduate in economics and need an introductory course.

Full programme

INTRODUCTION
1. The capitalist revolution
2.Technology, population, and growth

MICROECONOMICS
3. Scarcity, incentives, and choice
4. Social interactions, property and power
5 The firm: owners, managers, employees, consumers.
6. Demand and Supply
7. Markets dynamics and efficiency

MACROECONOMICS
8. General notions
8.1 National accounts
9. Aggregate demand and equilibrium in a closed economy
9.1 The aggregate consumption function
9.2 The equilibrium in the goods market
9.3 The multiplier
10. Investment
10.1 Firms’ investment decision
11. The money market
11.1 Demand and supply for money
11.2 Money market and goods market
12. The transition from the short-run to the medium-run
13. The labour market
13.1 The labour market: Supply and Demand
13.2 The trade-off between unemployment and inflation
13.3 Unemployment and business cycle

Bibliography

The Core Team. "The Economy", Oxford University Press, 1st Edition, 2022 (reprint), (chapters 1-8, 11-12).
O. Blanchard, A. Amighini, F. Giavazzi "Macroeconomics: a European perspective", 2021 (chapters 2-5, 7-9).
Slides: will be uploaded on Elly platform.

Teaching methods

Organization: 12 weeks.
Part I – Introduction + Microeconomics
Part II – Macroeconomics
Classes will be both theoretical AND applied, including exercises and applications to real world problems.
Non-attending students should check the teaching material and the instructions provided by the teacher through the Elly platform.
Both teachers are available during their office hours for students to clarify the lessons and exercises

Assessment methods and criteria

2 options will be available:
- Option 1: final exam in any of the official exam sessions.
- Option 2: midterm exam (50% of final grade) during the term + 2nd partial exam (50% of final grade) in the winter exam session after the course end.
All exams are written.
During the exam it is forbidden to consult notes, slides, books and any electronic device. Small pocket calculators are allowed.

Both the midterm and second partial exam last 1 hour and include: 1 numerical exercise, worth 10 points; 1 long-answer questions, worth 10 points; 6 closed/multiple answer questions which are worth 2 points each.
The final exam consists of two parts (Micro + Macro) and lasts 2 hours. Each part includes: 1 numerical exercise, worth 10 points; 1 long-answer questions, worth 10 points; 6 closed/multiple answer questions which are worth 2 points each.

In order to pass the exam, a student shall obtain 18 points in both the two midterm exams, or in both parts in the final exam. Honors are awarded to students who reach the maximum score, i.e. 32 points, in both the two midterm exams or in the final exam.

For Part I: extra points can be earned by attending students that actively participate to class activities. These extra points will be added to the final evaluation of Part I, provided that a sufficient grade (18) is obtained and the exam is taken in the winter session (any option).

Knowledge and learning ability will be tested by the short-answer questions. The skills in applying knowledge will be tested by the numerical exercise. Judgement and learning abilities will be tested by the long-answer question which requires a wide and in depth argumentation. The ability to properly communicate by means of technical language will be evaluated through the analysis of the language used to answer this question.

Each students receives his/her grade through the Elly page (for midterms) or the ESSE3 system (for all other exams) within the two weeks following the exam. The registration for the exam is mandatory.

Other information

2030 agenda goals for sustainable development

Contacts

Toll-free number

800 904 084

Contacts

Toll-free number
800 904 084

Student registry office

E. segreteria.economia@unipr.it

Quality assurance office

Education manager:
dott.ssa Giovanna Colangelo
T. +39 0521 902296
E. didattica.sea@unipr.it
E. giovanna.colangelo@unipr.it

President of degree course

prof. Paolo Fabbri
E. paolo.fabbri@unipr.it

Faculty advisor

prof.ssa Donata Tania Vergura
E. donatatania.vergura@unipr.it

Carrier guidance delegate

prof. Franco Mosconi
E. franco.mosconi@unipr.it

Tutor professors

prof. Paolo Fabbri
E. paolo.fabbri@unipr.it
prof. Vincenzo Dall'Aglio
E. vincenzo.dallaglio@unipr.it

Erasmus delegate

prof. Andrea Cilloni
E. andrea.cilloni@unipr.it

Quality assurance manager

prof. Vincenzo Dall'Aglio
E. vincenzo.dallaglio@unipr.it

Internships

prof. Paolo Fabbri
E. paolo.fabbri@unipr.it

Student Tutors

dott. Dalila Baldini
E. dalila.baldini@unipr.it
dott. Chiara Bacchilega
E. chiara.bacchilega@unipr.it