Examenskurs VWL I: Geldpolitik, Mikro- & Makroökonomik

im Wintersemester 2025/26

 

 

 

Der Examenskurs VWL I findet im WS 2025/26 zu den folgenden Terminen statt:

 

Samstag,

8. November

10:00-17:30 Uhr

Amalienstr. 73A, Raum 112

Mittwoch,

12. November

15:30-17:00 Uhr

online via Zoom

Mittwoch,

19. November

15:30-17:00 Uhr

online via Zoom

Samstag,

29. November

10:00-17:30 Uhr

GSP, Raum A 213

Freitag,

5. Dezember

14:00-17:30 Uhr

online via Zoom

 

 

Eine Anmeldung zum Kurs ist nicht erforderlich. Bitte beachten Sie, dass die Präsenzveranstaltungen ausschließlich vor Ort stattfinden und nicht gestreamt werden.

 

Alle Materialien zum Kurs finden Sie im Moodle-Kurs unter dem folgenden Link: https://moodle.lmu.de/course/view.php?id=43773

 Passwort: VWL1!


Einschreibeschlüssel: Makro1WiSe2526

Microeconomics analyzes the economic behavior of households and firms and explains how markets in which households and firms interact work. The lecture introduces the fundamentals of the field, provides an overview of further topics that are explored in greater depth in other lectures, and is intended to spark your interest in economics.


Termine

  • Übungen:  Freitag, 12:00 - 14:00 Uhr

Einschreibeschlüssel

  • Der Einschreibeschlüssel lautet "FiWi&WiPol25".

In this course, we will explore key topics in development economics, with an aim to understand the central questions in this field: Why are some countries rich and some countries poor? Why does poverty persist? What tools can help to alleviate poverty? After working through these “big picture" questions together, we will study the micro-foundations of growth by exploring how economic activity is organized within firms, informal markets, villages, and the State. We will examine how individuals in these diverse organizations—from modern factories to household enterprises, farms, and local government offices—make critical decisions about how to deploy scarce resources, and the constraints they face in the process. We will study these topics using a combination of economic theory, descriptive statistics, and hypothesis testing through empirical applications. The reading list (see syllabus) outlines some of the recent literature we will discuss. Additionally, problem sets during tutorial sessions will complement the class discussions. This course is designed for students in the Master's or PhD program in Economics. The enrollment key is available under as "Kommentar"/"Comment" to the lecture entry on LSF.