Fundamentals of Economics

SHE level 1
SCQF credit points 20.0
ECTS credit points 10.0
Module code M1L426987
Module Leader Thomas Dudley
School Glasgow School for Business and Society
Subject Economics
Trimester B (January start)

Summary of content

This module introduces students to Economic theory, Critical Thinking and the sourcing and analysis of Economic data. It is designed to provide students with a solid foundation of mainstream Economic theory and concepts that can be applied to undertake elementary quantitative analysis of economic and business data. The aim is to equip students with a set of analytical tools and concepts from economic theory and simple quantitative methods that can be applied at Level One and further developed at subsequent levels to facilitate students understanding of other cognate Business disciplines and/or underpin further study of Economics modules.

The module has five main elements:
Microeconomic theory: the study of individual markets, consumer/worker and firm behaviour, policy implications
Macroeconomic theory: the study of economic aggregates - economic growth, employment, inflation, balance of payments/international trade, policy implications
Introduction to the Electronic Spreadsheet as used in Business, Finance and Economics
Quantitative methods: Descriptive statistics, graphing, tabulation and correlation
Elementary critical and lateral thinking

Example of PRME-related issues / topics are covered in this module:
Principle 1 (develop the capabilities of students to be future generators of sustainable value for business and society...)
Principle 2 (incorporate into our academic activities and curricula the values of global social responsibility...) Principle 3 (create educational frameworks, materials, processes and environments that enable effective learning experiences for responsible leadership)
Principle 4 (...engage in conceptual and empirical research that advances our understanding about the role, dynamics, and impact of corporations in the creation of sustainable social, environmental and economic value...) Consideration of how to allocate scarce resources to maximise social welfare Improved data-use and intellectual skills leading to a better understanding of the role for and limitations of quantitative analysis in decision-making . Improved intellect and an ability to see the 'World' from other perspectives enhancing the students' citizenship values and leadership skills.

Module details

Module structure

Activity Total hours
Lectures 15.00
Independent Learning 145.00
Assessment 40.00

Assessment methods

Component Duration Weighting Threshold Description
Exam001 100 35 Unseen exam: Multiple Choice