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TEACHING INTERNATIONAL ECONOMICS UK EXPERIENCES. HUGH METCALF: NEWCASTLE UNIVERSITY BUSINESS SCHOOL
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TEACHING INTERNATIONAL ECONOMICS Introduction to my thought processes: Who are our students? What careers will they progress onto? What core knowledge do they need? What key skills do they need? This allows us to identify they principal components of the curriculum. Has the recent financial crisis caused us to re-evaluate this? HUGH METCALF NEWCASTLE UNIVERSITY BUSINESS SCHOOL
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TEACHING INTERNATIONAL ECONOMICS Who are our students? 1% of undergraduates in UK study economics; 80% were males in 2002. Economics primarily taught at higher status universities; International economics even more so! So the students are higher academically achieving (male) group. HUGH METCALF NEWCASTLE UNIVERSITY BUSINESS SCHOOL
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TEACHING INTERNATIONAL ECONOMICS What careers will they progress onto? Economics graduates are the second highest paid group of graduates in the country (after medicine). Destinations include: Government economic service; accounting and consulting firms; investment banks; hedge funds; multinational corporations; academia; research institutes and consultancies; etc. HUGH METCALF NEWCASTLE UNIVERSITY BUSINESS SCHOOL
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TEACHING INTERNATIONAL ECONOMICS What core knowledge do they need? International Economics will be an optional module that few will ‘use’ in later life! General economic and quantitative theory, with a heavy emphasis on mathematical representations. Opportunity cost. General and partial equilibrium considerations of trading (or not) across borders. Specifically theories of trade and of exchange rate determination combined with international macroeconomics. Understanding of policy instruments that are used by governments in trade and exchange rate domains. HUGH METCALF NEWCASTLE UNIVERSITY BUSINESS SCHOOL
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TEACHING INTERNATIONAL ECONOMICS What key skills do they need? Presentational skills Quantitative analysis skills Ability to think like an economist!! Problem framing skills. Mathematical modelling skills. HUGH METCALF NEWCASTLE UNIVERSITY BUSINESS SCHOOL
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TEACHING INTERNATIONAL ECONOMICS This allows us to identify the principal components of the curriculum. General macroeconomic and quantitative analysis elements (generally covered elsewhere). Trade theory and policies, tariffs and subsidies. Patterns of trade: Ricardian, Specific Factors, H-O, movement of labour. New trade theories: Increasing returns to scale, offshoring. Trade policy: Tariffs, Subsidies, International Agreements. Exchange rate determination, regimes and policies. Exchange rates: monetary approach L.R., Asset approach S.R. Balance of Payments: national accounts, global finance. Policy: Fixed and Floating rates, pegs and crises, optimum currency areas. HUGH METCALF NEWCASTLE UNIVERSITY BUSINESS SCHOOL
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TEACHING INTERNATIONAL ECONOMICS Has the recent financial crisis caused us to re-evaluate this? Role of interest rates Role of money creation on inflation and exchange rates Risk premiums Contagion. HUGH METCALF NEWCASTLE UNIVERSITY BUSINESS SCHOOL
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