Four credit hours. This course offers an overview of both microeconomics and macroeconomics. Microeconomic topics include supply/demand markets, welfare analysis including consumer and producer surplus, deadweight loss, externalities and public goods, and theories of industrial competition. Macroeconomic topics begin with aggregate measurement of key indicators, international economics and trade, key macro markets such as labor and money markets, the Federal Reserve, aggregate supply and demand, and government tools including fiscal and monetary policy.