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Jan 15, 2025
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ECON 627 - Behavioral Economics and Finance (3 units) This course examines the history, ideas, and applications of Behavioral Economics and Finance. It examines the heuristics and biases of decision making at both the microeconomic and macroeconomic levels.
Maximum units a student may earn: 3
Grading Basis: Graded Units of Lecture: 3 Offered: Every Spring
Student Learning Outcomes Upon completion of this course, students will be able to: 1. identify key ideas in the history of Behavioral Economics and Behavioral Finance. 2. identify the mental shortcuts that humans, in general, and market participants, in particular, typically rely upon. 3. demonstrate understanding that mental shortcuts, also called heuristics, are used because they are ecologically rational (i.e, frugal and useful, on average, in a given environment) even if they are not generally valid across all environments. 4. distinguish the concept of (generic) rationality from environment-specific rationality (or ecological rationality). 5. recognize the downsides of applying ecological rationality. 6. recognize behavioral and cognitive biases that arise as a consequence of the application of mental shortcuts. 7. connect the presence of behavioral and cognitive biases with the existence of financial crises. 8. analyze situations using concepts and models from behavioral finance & economics.
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