Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences
Governing the European Economy: Between Market and State
Full course description
The course is an introduction to the roles of the state in economic relations. The students will learn how markets function, and what do public authorities do in order to ensure fair competition and the regulation of negative and positive externalities (such as environmental pollution or public health via vaccines). The course will furthermore serve as basic introduction to public choice models discussing why/how states levy taxes and redistribute income. Last but not least, the course will lay the foundations of International Political Economy exploring topics such as international trade, geo-economics and the economic rationale behind international/European economic integration.
Course objectives
- Introduce students to economic thinking and reasoning
- Explain the conditions for the appropriate functioning of markets
- Map out the most important roles of the state in economic relations
- Allow students to be informed participants in debates about basic economic choices in various public policy domains
- Understand the role of the state in international trade and global economic cooperation
Recommended reading
Various sources - see coursebook.
EUS2009
Period 2
28 Oct 2024
20 Dec 2024
ECTS credits:
9.0Instruction language:
EnglishCoordinator:
- L.A.S. van Efferink
Teaching methods:
Lecture(s), PBLKeywords:
economics, markets, state interventions, economic cooperation