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Economics M.A.

LEARNING OBJECTIVES

1. Upon completion of the degree, students should be able to understand how fundamental microeconomic concepts (such as preferences, utility functions as representations of preferences, production functions, prices, income, demand functions, supply functions, perfect competition, oligopoly, monopoly, and equilibrium) can be combined to analyze and model markets, how different market structures can result in different equilibrium prices, consumer and producer surplus, and how to find the equilibrium (or equilibria) of such markets.

2. Upon completion of the degree, students should be able to understand how fundamental macroeconomic concepts (such as interest rates, investment, savings, government expenditures, taxes, inflation, and money supply), fit together to analyze and build a model of the macro economy, which accounts for the individual problems of individuals and producers in the economy, and whose general equilibrium can be solved using recursive methods and modern optimization techniques; Students will also be able to understand how macroeconomic concepts are related to microeconomic concepts and models, what is known as the micro-foundations of macroeconomics.

3. Upon completion of the degree, students should be able to understand how data can be used along with econometric methods to test the hypotheses derived from economic theory, namely, understand the basic methods of modern econometrics including multiple regression, non-linear models, maximum likelihood, and simulation methods as well as understand how under some conditions advanced econometric models coupled with recursive methods can allow us to uncover the preference parameters of an economic model properly specified.

4. Upon completion of the degree, students should be able to pose and answer a research question by constructing a model of a market or an economy, by using fundamental economics concepts as well as algebraic functions, concepts from algebra and calculus, numerical graphs and solution methods to analyze the model, and by using econometric and statistical techniques to connect the theoretical implications of the model with the empirical evidence.

SUCCESS RATES

64.0%

3-year graduation rate

1.70

Avg. years to degree

MEDIAN EARNINGS

$89,202

10 years after graduation

$62,964

5 years after graduation

$29,343

1 year after graduation

PLACEMENT2 years after graduation

36.1%

Working in New York

31.3%

Continuing Education

Notes

Graduation rates: the percent of students entering the master’s program any time during the academic year and graduating by May 31 three years later. Methodology is parallel to AAU Data Exchange doctoral completion rates and means that spring entrants have less time to complete. Average of three most recent reporting years (2021-22, 2022-23, 2023-24) Years to degree: the average number of years it takes a student to complete the selected program. Average of the three most recent completion years (2020-21, 2021-22, 2022-23). No Asterisk-Earnings: the median annual earnings of graduates in the selected program at the master’s degree level based on the 2-digit CIP code at 1, 5 and 10 years after graduation. U.S. Census, Postsecondary Enrollment Outcomes Explorer. Degree completers from 2001-2018 in 2020 dollars. Asterisk- Earnings: the median annual earnings of graduates in the selected program at the master’s degree level at 1, 5 and 10 years after graduation. SUNY Graduates Post Completions Interactive Dashboard. Degree completers from 2005-2019 in 2020 dollars. Working in NY State: the percent of graduates working in New York State two years after graduation. SUNY Wages Dashboard, includes graduates from 2015-18. Most recent available data from SUNY as of January 31, 2024