BSc in Economics with Economic History
For all first, second and third year students in 2014-15
Paper |
Course number and title | |
See note |
The LSE Course: Understanding the causes of things | |
Year 1 | ||
---|---|---|
1 |
Economics B | |
2 |
The Internationalisation of Economic Growth, 1870 to the Present Day | |
3 |
Mathematical Methods | |
4 |
Elementary Statistical Theory | |
Year 2 | ||
5 |
Either EC201 Microeconomic Principles I or EC202 Microeconomic Principles II | |
6 |
Macroeconomic Principles | |
7 |
Theories and Evidence in Economic History | |
8 |
One from: | |
|
Money and Finance: From the Middle Ages to Modernity | |
|
Towns, Society and Economy in England and Europe, 1450-1750 (n/a 14/15) | |
|
The Making of an Economic Superpower: China since 1850 | |
|
Latin America and the International Economy | |
|
The Industrial Revolution | |
Business and Economic Performance since 1945: Britain in International Context | ||
Year 3 | ||
9 & 10 |
Two from: | |
|
Either EC220 Introduction to Econometrics or EC221 Principles of Econometrics | |
|
Advanced Economic Analysis (n/a 14/15) | |
Political Economy | ||
Economic Policy Analysis | ||
Development Economics | ||
Behavioural Economics | ||
History of Economics: How Theories Change | ||
Industrial Economics | ||
International Economics | ||
Monetary Economics | ||
Public Economics | ||
11 |
One from: | |
|
The Origins of the World Economy, 1450-1750 (n/a 14/15) | |
The Economic History of North America: From Colonial Times to the Cold War | ||
Historical Economic Geography: Cities, Markets and Regions in the 19th and 20th Centuries | ||
Issues of Modern Japanese Economic Development: Late Industrialisation, Imperialism and High Speed Growth | ||
Innovation and its Finance in the 19th and 20th Centuries | ||
12 |
Either An approved paper taught outside the Departments of Economics and Economic History | |
Notes |
LSE100 is taken by all students in the Lent Term of Year 1 and the Michaelmas Term of Year 2. The course is compulsory but does not affect the final degree classification. |