Courses Exchange Display 2022-2023

Course Description To PDF
Course title Open Macroeconomics in a Global Society
Course code EBC4029
ECTS credits 6,5
Assessment Whole/Half Grades
Period
Period Start End Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri
2 31-10-2022 16-12-2022 X X
Level Advanced
Coordinator Clemens Kool
For more information: c.kool@maastrichtuniversity.nl
Language of instruction English
Goals
At the end of the course, students should be able to:
* Discuss causes and consequences of international economic and financial integration;
* Understand and explain the role of the Balance of Payments and its components in accounting for the interconnection of the domestic economy with the rest of the world;
* Understand and discuss the role of the real exchange rate (versus the real interest rate) in macroeconomic adjustment;
* Understand, explain and apply the 3-equation model for the open economy under fixed and floating exchange rates;
* Understand and explain the pros and cons of different foreign exchange rate regimes: floating, fixed, and monetary union;
* Understand how the current account can be analyzed from the perspective of intertemporal risk sharing – using a stock-flow framework – and apply this concept to real world cases;
* Understand and use the importance of stock-flow dynamics in government debt;
* Understand the – institutional – stabilization policy framework in the euro area and use it in combination with the 3-equation model for policy analysis;
Description
PLEASE NOTE THAT THE INFORMATION ABOUT THE TEACHING AND ASSESSMENT METHOD(S) USED IN THIS COURSE IS WITH RESERVATION. A RE-EMERGENCE OF THE CORONAVIRUS AND NEW COUNTERMEASURES BY THE DUTCH GOVERNMENT MIGHT FORCE COORDINATORS TO CHANGE THE TEACHING AND ASSESSMENT METHODS USED. THE MOST UP-TO-DATE INFORMATION ABOUT THE TEACHING/ASSESSMENT METHOD(S) WILL BE AVAILABLE IN THE COURSE SYLLABUS.

Over the past decades, the global economy has steadily become more integrated, leading to larger flows of trade in goods and services and of financial capital, longer and more complicated value chains in the production of manufactured goods, and a build-up of large stock of both financial and non-financial foreign assets and liabilities. Obviously, this makes national economies more interdependent and requires taking into account spill-overs from the rest of the world into the domestic economy. It raises the issue how an economy adjusts to demand and supply shocks and the role of the current account, the (real) exchange rate and monetary and fiscal stabilization policies in the adjustment. Similarly, it asks what the influence is of the chosen exchange rate regime: floating, fixed or monetary union and the limitations this puts on policy. In the course, we develop an open economy framework to address these questions. Initially, we build on the closed economy 3-equation model developed in the course ‘ECB and Monetary Policy’. We extend the analysis to an open economy setting. Important additional issues are the stock-flow dynamics in the Balance of Payments as well as stock-flow dynamics in government debt. These explicitly require an intertemporal approach. In the final part of the course, we explicitly focus on stabilization and risk sharing in the Euro area. As a monetary union, it faces different constraints on monetary and fiscal stabilization policy than stand-alone countries. Moreover, the chosen institutional design further restricts the possibilities for stabilization.
Literature
Selected chapters and articles.
Prerequisites
Second-year International Monetary Economics course (level book Krugman and Obstfeld), “International Economics: Theory and Policy”. Exchange students need to have obtained a Bachelor degree with a major in Economics or in Econometrics/Quantitative Economics.
an advanced level of English
Teaching methods (indicative; course manual is definitive) PBL / Presentation
Assessment methods (indicative; course manual is definitive) Participation / Written Exam / Presentation
Evaluation in previous academic year For the complete evaluation of this course please click "here"
This course belongs to the following programmes / specialisations
Master Econometrics and Operations Research Free Electives
Master Financial Economics - Asset Pricing Elective Course(s)
Master Financial Economics - Banking Elective Course(s)
Master Financial Economics - Financial Analysis Elective Course(s)
Master Financial Economics - No specialisation Elective Course(s)
Master Fiscal Economics Economics Elective(s)
SBE Exchange Master Master Exchange Courses
SBE Non Degree Courses Master Courses