Syllabus
Registration via LPIS
Day | Date | Time | Room |
---|---|---|---|
Thursday | 11/28/24 | 10:00 AM - 01:30 PM | D5.1.003 |
Thursday | 12/05/24 | 10:00 AM - 01:30 PM | D5.1.003 |
Thursday | 12/12/24 | 10:00 AM - 01:30 PM | D5.1.003 |
Thursday | 12/19/24 | 10:00 AM - 01:30 PM | D5.1.003 |
Thursday | 01/09/25 | 10:00 AM - 01:30 PM | D5.1.003 |
Thursday | 01/16/25 | 10:00 AM - 01:30 PM | D5.1.003 |
Thursday | 01/23/25 | 10:00 AM - 01:30 PM | D5.1.003 |
In this course we investigate effects of socio-economic inequality on well-being and sustainability. A thriving literature analyses the development of income inequality over time, its determinants, and its consequences. The aim of this course is to read several significant contributions to these fields, and discuss their implications. Specifically, the first part of the course focuses on recent trends in income inequality. We also briefly discuss inequality by gender and race. The second and largest part looks at the effects of inequality on various outcomes, like crime, consumerism, household indebtedness, and the environment. The third part investigates determinants of income inequality, and options of policy makers to address high inequality.
Upon successful completion of the course students will know:
- About recent trends in income inequality in and between countries, and understand the core-differences between various measures of inequality.
- How inequality affects our society, economy, and environment
- Key determinants of income inequality, and how policy makers can tackle inequality without causing significant unintended side effects.
- Basics about causality and credible identification strategies
- How to (critically) read academic articles.
This is an examination-immanent course with compulsory attendance. To fulfill the minimum attendance requirement, you have to attend at least 6 full sessions out of 7. Please inform me of your absence beforehand.
- Lectures
- Student group presentations
- Discussions
- Videos
- Quizzes
Note: Students are required to read, present, and discuss academic articles.
- Presentation (40%)
- Prepared comment on other group's presentation (10%)
- Discussion questions on readings (10%)
- Short quizzes on previous class (20%)
- Participation (20%)
Course enrollment is based on the 'first-come, first-served' principle. If you have registered but cannot participate in the course, please de-register via LPIS during the registration period so that your place is available to students on the waiting list. If there is a waiting list for enrollment in the course, students on the waiting list will be notified after the end of the enrollment period and will be allocated to available places. Students will be ranked by progress in their studies, not by their rank on the waiting list. This procedure, however, is not to be understood as a guarantee of class space.
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Students are required to read, present, and discuss academic articles and papers on covered topics. Many of these papers apply advanced regression analysis. Students are not required to know these methods to accomplish this course, since the focus lies on intuition and the big picture of these papers. It helps, however, if they are interested in learning how to interpret empirical findings.
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