B.A. (Hons.) Economics
B.A. (Hons.) Economics
B.A. (Hons.) Economics
UNIVERSITY OF DELHI
DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS
UNDERGRADUATE PROGRAMME
Disclaimer: The CBCS syllabus is uploaded as given by the Faculty concerned to the Academic
Council. The same has been approved as it is by the Academic Council on 13.7.2015 and
Executive Council on 14.7.2015. Any query may kindly be addressed to the concerned Faculty.
Undergraduate Programme Secretariat
Preamble
The University Grants Commission (UGC) has initiated several measures to bring equity,
efficiency and excellence in the Higher Education System of country. The important
measures taken to enhance academic standards and quality in higher education include
innovation and improvements in curriculum, teaching-learning process, examination and
evaluation systems, besides governance and other matters.
The UGC has formulated various regulations and guidelines from time to time to improve
the higher education system and maintain minimum standards and quality across the
Higher Educational Institutions (HEIs) in India. The academic reforms recommended by
the UGC in the recent past have led to overall improvement in the higher education system.
However, due to lot of diversity in the system of higher education, there are multiple
approaches followed by universities towards examination, evaluation and grading system.
While the HEIs must have the flexibility and freedom in designing the examination and
evaluation methods that best fits the curriculum, syllabi and teachinglearning methods,
there is a need to devise a sensible system for awarding the grades based on the
performance of students. Presently the performance of the students is reported using the
conventional system of marks secured in the examinations or grades or both. The
conversion from marks to letter grades and the letter grades used vary widely across the
HEIs in the country. This creates difficulty for the academia and the employers to
understand and infer the performance of the students graduating from different
universities and colleges based on grades.
The grading system is considered to be better than the conventional marks system and
hence it has been followed in the top institutions in India and abroad. So it is desirable to
introduce uniform grading system. This will facilitate student mobility across institutions
within and across countries and also enable potential employers to assess the performance
of students. To bring in the desired uniformity, in grading system and method for
computing the cumulative grade point average (CGPA) based on the performance of
students in the examinations, the UGC has formulated these guidelines.
Details of courses under B.A (Honors), B.Com (Honors) & B.Sc. (Honors)
Course
*Credits
Theory+ Practical
Theory + Tutorial
=================================================================
I. Core Course
(14 Papers)
14X4= 56
14X5=70
14X2=28
14X1=14
4X4=16
4X5=20
4 X 2=8
4X1=4
4X4=16
4X5=20
4 X 2=8
4X1=4
(4 Papers)
Optional Dissertation or project work in place of one Discipline Specific Elective paper (6
credits) in 6th Semester
III. Ability Enhancement Courses
1. Ability Enhancement Compulsory
(2 Papers of 2 credit each)
2 X 2=4
2 X 2=4
Environmental Science
English/MIL Communication
2. Ability Enhancement Elective (Skill Based)
(Minimum 2)
2 X 2=4
2 X 2=4
_________________
140
Institute
should
evolve
a
system/policy
Interest/Hobby/Sports/NCC/NSS/related courses on its own.
140
about
ECA/
General
Semester-II
Economics Core Course 3 : Introductory Macroeconomics
Semester-III
Economics Core Course 5 : Intermediate Microeconomics-I
Economics Core Course 6 : Intermediate Macroeconomics-I
Economics Core Course 7 : Statistical Methods for Economics
Skill Enhancement Course (SEC)-I
Generic Elective (GE) Course-III
Semester-IV
Economics Core Course 8 : Intermediate Microeconomics-II
Economics Core Course 9 : Intermediate Macroeconomics-II
Economics Core Course 10 : Introductory Econometrics
Skill Enhancement Course (SEC)-II
Generic Elective (GE) Course-IV
Semester-V
Economics Core Course 11 : Indian Economy-I
Economics Core Course 12 : Development Economics-I
Discipline Specific Elective (DSE) Course-I (From List of
Group-I)
Semester-VI
Economics Core Course 13 : Indian Economy-II
Economics Core Course 14 : Development Economics-II
Discipline Specific Elective (DSE) Course-III (From List of
Group-II)
Readings
1. Karl E. Case and Ray C. Fair, Principles of Economics, Pearson Education Inc., 8th
Edition, 2007.
2. N. Gregory Mankiw, Economics: Principles and Applications, India edition by South
Western, a part of Cengage Learning, Cengage Learning India Private Limited, 4th
edition, 2007.
3. Joseph E. Stiglitz and Carl E. Walsh, Economics, W.W. Norton & Company, Inc.,
New York, International Student Edition, 4th Edition, 2007.
Readings:
K. Sydsaeter and P. Hammond, Mathematics for Economic Analysis, Pearson
Educational Asia: Delhi, 2002.
Course Outline
1. Consumer Theory
Preference; utility; budget constraint; choice; demand; Slutsky equation; buying and
selling; choice under risk and intertemporal choice; revealed preference.
2. Production, Costs and Perfect Competition
Technology; isoquants; production with one and more variable inputs; returns to scale;
short run and long run costs; cost curves in the short run and long run; review of perfect
competition.
Readings:
1. Hal R. Varian, Intermediate Microeconomics, a Modern Approach, W.W. Norton
and Company/Affiliated East-West Press (India), 8th edition, 2010. The workbook
by Varian and Bergstrom may be used for problems.
2. C. Snyder and W. Nicholson, Fundamentals of Microeconomics, Cengage
Learning (India), 2010.
3. B. Douglas Bernheim and Michael D. Whinston, Microeconomics, Tata McGrawHill (India), 2009.
11
12
b.
c.
13
15
10. J.B.G. Tilak, 2007, Post Elementary Education, Poverty and Development in
India, International Journal of Educational Development.
11. T. Dyson, 2008, Indias Demographic Transition and its Consequences for
Development in Uma Kapila, editor, Indian Economy Since Independence, 19th
edition, Academic Foundation.
12. Kaushik Basu, 2009, China and India: Idiosyncratic Paths to High Growth,
Economic and Political Weekly, September.
13. K. James, 2008, Glorifying Malthus: Current Debate on Demographic Dividend
in India Economic and Political Weekly, June.
14. Reetika Khera, 2011, Indias Public Distribution System: Utilisation and Impact
Journal of Development Studies.
15. Aniruddha Krishna and Devendra Bajpai, 2011, Lineal Spread and Radial
Dissipation: Experiencing Growth in Rural India, 1992-2005, Economic and
Political Weekly, September.
16. Kaushik Basu and A. Maertens, eds, 2013, The New Oxford Companion to
Economics, Oxford University Press.
17
8. Dipak Mazumdar and Sandeep Sarkar, 2009, The Employment Problem in India
and the Phenomenon of the Missing Middle, Indian Journal of Labour
Economics.
9. J. Dennis Rajakumar, 2011, Size and Growth of Private Corporate Sector in
Indian Manufacturing, Economic and Political Weekly, April.
10. Ramesh Chand, 2010, Understanding the Nature and Causes of Food Inflation,
Economic and Political Weekly, February.
11. Bishwanath Goldar, 2011, Organised Manufacturing Employment: Continuing
the Debate, Economic and Political Weekly, April.
12. Kaushik Basu and A. Maertens, eds, 2013, The New Oxford Companion to
Economics in India, Oxford University Press.
20
22
Course Description
The importance of education and health in improving well-being is reflected in their
inclusion among the Millennium Development Goals adopted by the United Nations
member states, which include among other goals, achieving universal primary education,
reducing child mortality, improving maternal health and combating diseases. This course
provides a microeconomic framework to analyze, among other things, individual choice
in the demand for health and education, government intervention and aspects of inequity
and discrimination in both sectors. It also gives an overview of health and education in
India.
Course Outline
1. Role of Health and Education in Human Development
Importance in poverty alleviation; health and education outcomes and their relationship
with macroeconomic performance.
2. Microeconomic Foundations of Health Economics
Demand for health; uncertainty and health insurance market; alternative insurance
mechanisms; market failure and rationale for public intervention; equity and inequality.
3. Evaluation of Health Programs
Costing, cost effectiveness and cost-benefit analysis; burden of disease.
4. Health Sector in India: An Overview
Health outcomes; health systems; health financing.
5. Education: Investment in Human Capital
Rate of return to education: private and social; quality of education; signaling or human
capital; theories of discrimination; gender and caste discrimination in India.
6. Education Sector in India: An Overview
Literacy rates, school participation, school quality measures.
Readings:
1. William, Jack, Principles of Health Economics for Developing Countries, World
23
24
Course Description
The aim of this course is to provide a foundation in applied econometric analysis and develop
skills required for empirical research in economics. Topics include specification and selection of
regression models, dynamic econometric models, advanced methods in regression analysis and
panel data models. Since the emphasis is on application of methods, this course requires
understanding of econometric software and computing skills.
Course Outline
1. Stages in Empirical Econometric Research
2. Regression Diagnostics and Specification
Misspecification; functional forms; model selection.
3. Advanced Topics in Regression Analysis
Selected Topics:
Dynamic Econometric Models: distributed lag models; autoregressive models;
instrumental variable estimation; simultaneous equation models.
4. Panel Data Models
Methods of estimation; fixed effects model; random effects model.
5. Introduction to Econometric Software Package
GRETL; E-VIEWS; STATA (any one).
Readings:
25
Course Description
This course analyses key aspects of Indian economic development during the second half
of British colonial rule. In doing so, it investigates the place of the Indian economy in the
wider colonial context, and the mechanisms that linked economic development in India to
the compulsions of colonial rule. This course links directly to the course on Indias
economic development after independence in 1947.
Course Outline
2. Macro Trends
National Income; population; occupational structure.
3. Agriculture
Agrarian structure and land relations; agricultural markets and institutions credit,
commerce and technology; trends in performance and productivity; famines.
Readings:
1. Lakshmi Subramanian, History of India 1707-1857, Orient Blackswan, 2010,
Chapter 4.
2. Sumit Guha, 1991, Mortality decline in early 20th century India, Indian Economic
and Social History Review (IESHR), pp 371-74 and 385-87.
3. Tirthankar Roy, The Economic History of India 1857-1947, Oxford University
Press, 3rd edition, 2011.
4. J. Krishnamurty, Occupational Structure, Dharma Kumar (editor), The Cambridge
Economic History of India, Vol. II, (henceforth referred to as CEHI), 2005, Chapter
6.
5. Irfan Habib, Indian Economy 1858-1914, A Peoples History of India, Vol.28,
Tulika, 2006.
26
6. Ira Klein, 1984, When Rains Fail: Famine relief and mortality in British India,
IESHR 21.
7. Jean Dreze, Famine Prevention in India in Dreze and Sen (eds.) Political
Economy of Hunger, WIDER Studies in Development Economics, 1990, pp.1335.
8. John Hurd, Railways, CEHI, Chapter 8, pp.737-761.
9. Rajat Ray (ed.), Entrepreneurship and Industry in India, 1994.
10. AK Bagchi, Deindustrialization in India in the nineteenth century: Some
theoretical implications, Journal of Development Studies, 1976.
11. MD Morris, Emergence of an Industrial Labour Force in India, OUP 1965,
Chapter 11, Summary and Conclusions.
12. K.N. Chaudhuri, Foreign Trade and Balance of Payments, CEHI, Chapter 10.
13. B.R. Tomlison, 1975, India and the British Empire 1880-1935, IESHR, Vol.XII.
14. Dharma Kumar, The Fiscal System, CEHI, Chapter 12.
15. Basudev Chatterjee, Trade, Tariffs and Empire, OUP 1992, Epilogue.
Background reading for students:
Irfan Habib, Indian Economy 1858-1914 (A Peoples History of India), Vol.28, Tulika
2006.
Daniel Thorner, Agrarian Prospect in India, 1977.
L. Visaria and P. Visaria, Population. CEHI, Chapter 5.
27
Course Description
Game theory is an integral part of modern economic analysis. Topics in Microeconomics
- I introduces the students to elementary game theory under complete information. This
course introduces the basic concepts of game theory in a way that allows students to use
them in solving simple problems. The course will deal with the solution concepts for
normal form and extensive form games along with a variety of economic applications.
Course Outline
1. Normal form games
The normal form; dominant and dominated strategies; dominance solvability; mixed
strategies; Nash equilibrium; symmetric single population games; applications.
2. Extensive form games with perfect information
The game tree; strategies; subgame perfection; backward induction in finite games;
commitment; bargaining; other applications.
Reading:
1. Martin J. Osborne, An Introduction to Game Theory, Oxford University Press,
New Delhi, 2004.
28
Course Description
This course explores changes in the organisation of production, labour market
institutions and corporate structure. It goes on to study the consequences of
globalization, especially of financial flows, for the role of the state, economic
performance, gender issues, environment, human welfare and development.
Course Outline
1. Introduction and Historical Overview
Perspective on political economy with a historical overview: capitalist development in
the pre-second world war period, the golden age and later.
2. Changing Dynamics of Capitalist Production, Organisational Form and Labour
Process
Fordist and post-fordist production; changing dynamics of organisation of production,
markets and labour process; the changing nature of job security and labour rights.
3. The State in the Era of Globalisation: Welfare, Development and Autonomy
Globalisation and the limits of the welfare state, development and state autonomy.
4. The Changing Role of Finance
The changing role of finance in capital accumulation and corporate structure; finance and
globalisation - financialisation, financial liberalisation and financial crisis.
5. The Social Dimension
Globalisation and uneven development growth, inequality and exclusion.
6. New Perspectives
Gender in work, accumulation and globalisation; issues in environment and
sustainability; alternatives ahead.
Readings:
1. Michel Beaud, A History of Capitalism, 1500-2000, trans. by Tom Dickman and
Anny Lefebvre, New York: Monthly Review Press, 2001.
2. Ash Amin (ed.), Post-Fordism: A Reader, Blackwell, 1994.
3. Fran Tonkiss, Contemporary Economic Sociology: Globalisation, Production,
Inequality, Chapter 4 (Fordism and After), Routledge India 2008 reprint, 2006.
29
30
Course Description
This course exposes students to the theory and functioning of the monetary and financial
sectors of the economy. It highlights the organization, structure and role of financial
markets and institutions. It also discusses interest rates, monetary management and
instruments of monetary control. Financial and banking sector reforms and monetary
policy with special reference to India are also covered.
Course Outline
1. Money
Concept, functions, measurement; theories of money supply determination.
2. Financial Institutions, Markets, Instruments and Financial Innovations
a. Role of financial markets and institutions; problem of asymmetric information
adverse selection and moral hazard; financial crises.
b. Money and capital markets: organization, structure and reforms in India; role of
financial derivatives and other innovations.
3. Interest Rates
Determination; sources of interest rate differentials; theories of term structure of
interest rates; interest rates in India.
4. Banking System
a. Balance sheet and portfolio management.
b. Indian banking system: Changing role and structure; banking sector reforms.
5. Central Banking and Monetary Policy
Functions, balance sheet; goals, targets, indicators and instruments of monetary
control; monetary management in an open economy; current monetary policy of India.
Readings
1. F. S. Mishkin and S. G. Eakins, Financial Markets and Institutions, Pearson
Education, 6th edition, 2009.
2. F. J. Fabozzi, F. Modigliani, F. J. Jones, M. G. Ferri, Foundations of Financial
Markets and Institutions, Pearson Education, 3rd edition, 2009.
3. M. R. Baye and D. W. Jansen, Money, Banking and Financial Markets, AITBS,
1996.
4. Rakesh Mohan, Growth with Financial Stability- Central Banking in an Emerging
Market, Oxford University Press, 2011.
31
32
Course Description
Public economics is the study of government policy from the points of view of economic
efficiency and equity. The paper deals with the nature of government intervention and its
implications for allocation, distribution and stabilization. Inherently, this study involves a
formal analysis of government taxation and expenditures. The subject encompasses a host
of topics including public goods, market failures and externalities. The paper is divided
into two sections, one dealing with the theory of public economics and the other with the
Indian public finances.
Course Outline
1. Public Economic Theory
a. Fiscal functions: an overview.
b. Public Goods: definition, models of efficient allocation, pure and impure public
goods, free riding.
c. Externalities: the problem and its solutions, taxes versus regulation, property
rights, the Coase theorem.
d. Taxation: its economic effects; dead weight loss and distortion, efficiency and
equity considerations, tax incidence, optimal taxation.
2. Indian Public Finances
a. Tax System: structure and reforms
b. Budget, deficits and public debt
c. Fiscal federalism in India
Readings:
1. J. Hindriks, G. Myles: Intermediate Public Economics, MIT Press, 2006.
2. H. Rosen, T. Gayer: Public Finance, 9th ed., McGraw-Hill/Irwin, 2009.
3. Joseph E. Stiglitz, Economics of the Public Sector, W.W. Norton & Company, 3rd
edition, 2000.
4. R.A. Musgrave and P.B. Musgrave, Public Finance in Theory & Practice,
McGraw Hill Publications, 5th edition, 1989.
5. John Cullis and Philip Jones, Public Finance and Public Choice, Oxford
University Press, 1st edition, 1998.
6. Harvey Rosen, Public Finance, McGraw Hill Publications, 7th edition, 2005.
7. Mahesh Purohit, Value Added Tax: Experiences of India and Other Countries,
2007.
8. Kaushik Basu and A. Maertens (ed.), The N e w Oxford Companion to
Economics in India, Oxford University Press, 2013.
9. M.M. Sury, Government Budgeting in India, 1990.
33
10.
34
GROUP-II
Course Description
Employing perspectives from alternative schools of thought, this course explores the
development of the structure and institutions of capitalist economies and their
relationship to social and political forces. Students are expected to read some classic texts
as well as more recent commentaries.
Course Outline
1. Analysing Social Change in Historical Perspective
The method of historical materialism; the transition from feudalism to capitalism;
capitalism as a historical process alternative perspectives.
2. Capitalism as an Evolving Economic System
Basic features; accumulation and crisis; the modern corporation; monopoly capitalism
alternative perspectives.
3. The State in Capitalism
The state and the economy contestation and mutual interdependence; the state as an
arena of conflict; imperialism the basic foundations.
Readings:
1. J. Gurley, "The Materialist Conception of History", Ch.2.1 in R. Edwards, M.
Reich and T. Weisskopf (ed.), The Capitalist System, 2nd edition, 1978.
2. O. Lange, Political Economy, vol. 1, 1963, Chapters 1 and 2.
3. E.K. Hunt, History of Economic Thought, M.E. Sharpe, Indian edn, Shilpi
Publications, 2004.
4. Irfan Habib, 1995, "Capitalism in History", Social Scientist, Vol. 23: 15-31.
5. R.L. Heilbroner, "Capitalism", in The New Palgrave Dictionary of Modern
Economics, Macmillan, 1987. Also reprinted as Chapter 2 in Behind the Veil of
Economics by R.L. Heilbroner, W.W. Norton, 1988.
6. P. Sweezy, The Theory of Capitalist Development, Monthly Review Press, 1942,
35
36
(ix)
Course Description
This course investigates selected issues in comparative historical perspective over the
19th century and the first few decades of the 20th century. The course focuses on a set of
countries, which followed clearly diverse trajectories and patterns of growth to achieve
their industrial transition and compares the outcomes of these diverse trajectories on
sectoral change, inter-sectoral relations, labour processes and industrial relations and also
compares the role of the state in facilitating the respective trajectories.
Course Outline
1. Introduction and Perspectives on Comparative Economic Development
2. An Overview of Economic Development of the countries selected for case studies
3. Agriculture
Agrarian surplus and the role of the peasantry in economic development.
4. Industry
The industrial revolution in Britain; Industrialisation in late industrialisers.
5. The Factory System and Making of the Industrial Working Class
Division of labour, structure of industrial authority, organisation of work and industrial
production, relationship between workers and managers.
6. The Role of the State in Industrial and Developmental Transition
Readings:
1. E.J. Hobsbawm, World of Labour: Further studies in the history of labour, London
Weidenfeld & Nicholson, 1984.
2. E.J. Hobsbawm, Industry and Empire: An Economic History of Britain since 1750,
Weidenfeld & Nicholson, 1968.
3. Peter Mathias, The First Industrial Nation, An Economic History of Britain, 17001914. 2nd edition Methuen, 1983.
4. T. Nakamura, Economic Growth in Pre-War Japan, Tr. by Robert A Feldman, Yale
University Press, 1983.
5. Okochi, Karsh and Levine, Workers and Employees in Japan, The Japanese
Employment Relations System, University of Tokyo, 1965.
6. Y. Hayami, A Century of Agricultural Growth in Pre-War Japan: Its Relevance to
Asian Development, University of Minnesota Press, 1975.
7. Chalmers Johnson, MITI and the Japanese Miracle: The Growth of Industrial Policy
1925-1975, Stanford University Press, 1982.
37
38
(x)
FINANCIAL ECONOMICS
Course Description
This course introduces students to the economics of finance. Some of the basic models
used to benchmark valuation of assets and derivatives are studied in detail; these include
the CAPM, and the Binomial Option Pricing models. The course ends with a brief
introduction to corporate finance.
Course Outline
1. Investment Theory and Portfolio Analysis
a. Deterministic cash-flow streams
Basic theory of interest; discounting and present value; internal rate of return; evaluation
criteria; fixed-income securities; bond prices and yields; interest rate sensitivity and
duration; immunisation; the term structure of interest rates; yield curves; spot rates and
forward rates.
b. Single-period random cash flows
Random asset returns; portfolios of assets; portfolio mean and variance; feasible
combinations of mean and variance; mean-variance portfolio analysis: the Markowitz
model and the two-fund theorem; risk-free assets and the one-fund theorem.
c. CAPM
The capital market line; the capital asset pricing model; the beta of an asset and of a
portfolio; security market line; use of the CAPM model in investment analysis and as a
pricing formula.
2. Options and Derivatives
Introduction to derivatives and options; forward and futures contracts; options; other
derivatives; forward and future prices; stock index futures; interest rate futures; the use of
futures for hedging; duration-based hedging strategies; option markets; call and put
options; factors affecting option prices; put-call parity; option trading strategies: spreads;
straddles; strips and straps; strangles; the principle of arbitrage; discrete processes and the
binomial tree model; risk-neutral valuation.
3. Corporate Finance
Patterns of corporate financing: common stock; debt; preferences; convertibles; Capital
structure and the cost of capital; corporate debt and dividend policy; the ModiglianiMiller theorem.
39
Readings:
1. David G. Luenberger, Investment Science, Oxford University Press, USA, 1997.
2. Hull, John C., Options, Futures and Other Derivatives, Pearson Education, 6th
edition, 2005.
3. Thomas E. Copeland, J. Fred Weston and Kuldeep Shastri, Financial Theory and
Corporate Policy, Prentice Hall, 4th edition, 2003.
4. Richard A. Brealey and Stewart C. Myers, Principles of Corporate Finance,
McGraw-Hill, 7th edition, 2002.
5. Stephen A. Ross, Randolph W. Westerfield and Bradford D. Jordan,
Fundamentals of Corporate Finance. McGraw-Hill, 7th edition, 2005.
6. Burton G. Malkiel, A Random Walk Down Wall Street, W.W. Norton &
Company, 2003.
7. William Sharpe, Gordon Alexander and Jeffery Bailey, Investments, Prentice Hall
of India, 6th edition, 2003.
40
(xi)
TOPICS IN MICROECONOMICS - II
Course Description
This course deals with repeated games and games with incomplete information. Ideas
related to asymmetric information among the interacting economic agents would be the
main focus of this course. Students learn the concept of Bayesian and Perfect Bayesian
equilibrium. The course ends with the application of game theory to analyse moral
hazard, adverse selection and signalling problems.
Course Outline
1. Repeated Games.
Finitely repeated games and backward induction; infinitely repeated games; history
dependent strategies; one-step deviation property; the repeated prisoners dilemma; idea
of folk theorem.
2. Simultaneous move games with incomplete information (Bayesian games).
Strategies; Bayesian Nash equilibrium; auctions; other applications.
3. Extensive form games with imperfect information.
Strategies; beliefs and sequential equilibrium; applications.
4. Information economics.
Adverse selection; moral hazard; signalling games.
Readings:
1. Martin J. Osborne, An Introduction to Game Theory, Oxford University Press,
New Delhi, 2004.
2. Hugh Gravelle and Ray Rees, Microeconomics, Pearson Education, 2nd edition,
1992.
41
(xii)
ENVIRONMENTAL ECONOMICS
Course Description
This course focuses on economic causes of environmental problems. In particular,
economic principles are applied to environmental questions and their management
through various economic institutions, economic incentives and other instruments and
policies. Economic implications of environmental policy are also addressed as well as
valuation of environmental quality, quantification of environmental damages, tools for
evaluation of environmental projects such as cost-benefit analysis and environmental
impact assessments. Selected topics on international environmental problems are also
discussed.
Course Outline
1. Introduction
What is environmental economics; review of microeconomics and welfare economics.
2. The Theory of Externalities
Pareto optimality and market failure in the presence of externalities; property rights and
the coase theorem.
3. The Design and Implementation of Environmental Policy
Overview; pigouvian taxes and effluent fees; tradable permits; choice between taxes and
quotas under uncertainty; implementation of environmental policy.
4. International Environmental Problems
Trans-boundary environmental problems; economics of climate change; trade and
environment.
5. Measuring the Benefits of Environmental Improvements
Non-Market values and measurement methods; risk assessment and perception.
6. Sustainable Development
Concepts; measurement.
Readings:
1. Charles Kolstad, Intermediate Environmental Economics, Oxford University Press,
2nd edition, 2010.
2. Robert N. Stavins (ed.), Economics of the Environment: Selected Readings, W.W.
Norton, 5th edition, 2005.
3. Roger Perman, Yue Ma, James McGilvray and Michael Common, Natural Resource
and Environmental Economics, Pearson Education/Addison Wesley, 3rd edition, 2003.
4. Maureen L. Cropper and Wallace E. Oates, 1992, Environmental Economics: A
Survey, Journal of Economic Literature, Volume 30:675-740.
42
(xiii)
INTERNATIONAL ECONOMICS
Course Description
This course develops a systematic exposition of models that try to explain the
composition, direction, and consequences of international trade, and the determinants and
effects of trade policy. It then builds on the models of open economy macroeconomics
developed in courses 08 and 12, focusing on national policies as well as international
monetary systems. It concludes with an analytical account of the causes and
consequences of the rapid expansion of international financial flows in recent years.
Although the course is based on abstract theoretical models, students will also be exposed
to real-world examples and case studies.
Course Outline
1. Introduction
What is international economics about? An overview of world trade.
2. Theories of International Trade
The Ricardian, specific factors, and Heckscher-Ohlin models; new trade theories; the
international location of production; firms in the global economy outsourcing and
multinational enterprises.
3. Trade Policy
Instruments of trade policy; political economy of trade policy; controversies in trade
policy.
4. International Macroeconomic Policy
Fixed versus flexible exchange rates; international monetary systems; financial
globalization and financial crises.
Readings:
1. Paul Krugman, Maurice Obstfeld, and Marc Melitz, International Economics: Theory
and Policy, Addison-Wesley (Pearson Education Indian Edition), 9th edition, 2012.
2. Dominick Salvatore, International Economics: Trade and Finance, John Wiley
International Student Edition, 10th edition, 2011.
43
(xiv)
DISSERTATION
44
Semester I
Semester II
Generic Elective in Economics I: Introductory Generic Elective in Economics II: Introductory
Microeconomics
Macroeconomics
Semester III
Generic Elective in Economics III:
(a) Indian Economy-I OR
(b) Money and Banking OR
(c) Environmental Economics
Semester IV
Generic Elective in Economics IV:
(a) Indian Economy-II OR
(b) Economic History of India 1857-1947 OR
(c) Public Finance
(d)
Semester V
Semester VI
Readings
1. Karl E. Case and Ray C. Fair, Principles of Economics, Pearson Education Inc., 8th
Edition, 2007.
2. N. Gregory Mankiw, Economics: Principles and Applications, India edition by South
Western, a part of Cengage Learning, Cengage Learning India Private Limited, 4th edition,
2007.
3. Joseph E. Stiglitz and Carl E. Walsh, Economics, W.W. Norton & Company, Inc., New
York, International Student Edition, 4th Edition, 2007.
10. J.B.G. Tilak, 2007, Post Elementary Education, Poverty and Development in
India, International Journal of Educational Development.
11. T. Dyson, 2008, Indias Demographic Transition and its Consequences for
Development in Uma Kapila, editor, Indian Economy Since Independence, 19th
edition, Academic Foundation.
12. Kaushik Basu, 2009, China and India: Idiosyncratic Paths to High Growth,
Economic and Political Weekly, September.
13. K. James, 2008, Glorifying Malthus: Current Debate on Demographic Dividend in
India, Economic and Political Weekly, June.
14. Reetika Khera, 2011, Indias Public Distribution System: Utilisation and Impact
Journal of Development Studies.
15. Aniruddha Krishna and Devendra Bajpai, 2011, Lineal Spread and Radial
Dissipation: Experiencing Growth in Rural India, 1992-2005, Economic and
Political Weekly, September.
16. Kaushik Basu and A. Maertens, eds, 2013, Oxford Companion to Economics, Oxford
University Press.
1. Introduction
Key environmental issues and problems, economic way of thinking about these problems,
basic concepts from economics; Pareto optimality and market failure in the presence of
externalities; property rights and other approaches.
2. The Design and Implementation of Environmental Policy
Overview, Pigouvian taxes and effluent fees, tradable permits, implementation of
environmental policies in India and international experience; transboundary environmental
problems; economics of climate change.
3. Environmental Valuation Methods and Applications
Valuation of non-market goods and services--theory and practice; measurement methods;
cost-benefit analysis of environmental policies and regulations.
4. Sustainable Development
Concepts; measurement; perspectives from Indian experience
Readings
1. Roger Perman, Yue Ma, Michael Common, David Maddison and James McGilvray,
Natural Resource and Environmental Economics, Pearson Education/Addison
Wesley, 4th edition, 2011.
2. Charles Kolstad, Intermediate Environmental Economics, Oxford University Press, 2nd
edition, 2010.
3. Robert N. Stavins (ed.), Economics of the Environment: Selected Readings, W.W.
Norton, 6th edition, 2012.
4. Robert Solow , An Almost Practical Step toward Sustainability, Resources for the
Future 40th anniversary lecture,1992.
5. Kenneth Arrow et al. , Are We Consuming Too Much? Journal of Economic
Perspectives, 18(3): 147-172, 2004.
6. IPCC (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change), Fifth Assessment Report
(forthcoming 2014).
Course Description
This course analyses key aspects of Indian economic development during the second half of
British colonial rule. In doing so, it investigates the place of the Indian economy in the
wider colonial context, and the mechanisms that linked economic development in India to
the compulsions of colonial rule. This course links directly to the course on Indias
economic development after independence in 1947.
Course Outline
2. Macro Trends
National Income; population; occupational structure.
3. Agriculture
Agrarian structure and land relations; agricultural markets and institutions credit,
commerce and technology; trends in performance and productivity; famines.
Readings:
1. Lakshmi Subramanian, History of India 1707-1857, Orient Blackswan, 2010,
1
0
Chapter 4.
2. Sumit Guha, 1991, Mortality decline in early 20th century India, Indian Economic
and Social History Review (IESHR), pp 371-74 and 385-87.
3. Tirthankar Roy, The Economic History of India 1857-1947, Oxford University
Press, 3rd edition, 2011.
4. J. Krishnamurty, Occupational Structure, Dharma Kumar (editor), The Cambridge
Economic History of India, Vol. II, (henceforth referred to as CEHI), 2005, Chapter
6.
5. Irfan Habib, Indian Economy 1858-1914, A Peoples History of India, Vol.28,
Tulika, 2006.
6. Ira Klein, 1984, When Rains Fail: Famine relief and mortality in British India,
IESHR 21.
7. Jean Dreze, Famine Prevention in India in Dreze and Sen (eds.) Political
Economy of Hunger, WIDER Studies in Development Economics, 1990, pp.1335.
8. John Hurd, Railways, CEHI, Chapter 8, pp.737-761.
9. Rajat Ray (ed.), Entrepreneurship and Industry in India, 1994.
10. AK Bagchi, Deindustrialization in India in the nineteenth century: Some
theoretical implications, Journal of Development Studies, 1976.
11. MD Morris, Emergence of an Industrial Labour Force in India, OUP 1965,
Chapter 11, Summary and Conclusions.
12. K.N. Chaudhuri, Foreign Trade and Balance of Payments, CEHI, Chapter 10.
13. B.R. Tomlison, 1975, India and the British Empire 1880-1935, IESHR, Vol.XII.
14. Dharma Kumar, The Fiscal System, CEHI, Chapter 12.
15. Basudev Chatterjee, Trade, Tariffs and Empire, OUP 1992, Epilogue.
Background reading for students:
Irfan Habib, Indian Economy 1858-1914 (A Peoples History of India), Vol.28, Tulika
2006.
Daniel Thorner, Agrarian Prospect in India, 1977.
1
1
Course Description
This course is a non-technical overview of government finances with special reference to India.
The course does not require any prior knowledge of economics. It will look into the efficiency
and equity aspects of taxation of the centre, states and the local governments and the issues of
fiscal federalism and decentralisation in India. The course will be useful for students aiming
towards careers in the government sector, policy analysis, business and journalism.
Course Outline
Part 1: Theory
1. Overview of Fiscal Functions, Tools of Normative Analysis, Pareto Efficiency,
Equity and the Social Welfare.
2. Market Failure, Public Good and Externalities.
3. Elementary Theories of Product and Factor Taxation (Excess Burden and Incidence).
Part 2: Issues from Indian Public Finance
4. Working of Monetary and Fiscal Policies.
5. Current Issues of Indias Tax System.
6. Analysis of Budget and Deficits
7. Fiscal Federalism in India
8. State and Local Finances
Readings
1. Musgrave, R.A. and P.B. Musgrave, Public Finance in Theory and Practice, Mc-Graw
Hill, 1989.
2. Mahesh Purohit , Value Added Tax: Experience of India and Other Countries, Gayatri
Publications, 2007.
3. Kaushik Basu, and A. Maertens (ed.), The Oxford Companion to Economics in India,
Oxford University Press,2007.
4. M.M Sury, Government Budgeting in India, Commonwealth Publishers, 1990.
5. Shankar Acharya, Thirty years of tax reform in India, Economic and Political Weekly,
May 2005.
6. Government of India, Report of the 13th Finance Commission.
7. Economic Survey, Government of India (latest).
8. State Finances: A Study of Budgets, Reserve Bank of India (latest).
1
2
Course Description
This course introduces students to the economics of finance. The course does not require any
prior knowledge of economics. This course should be accessible to anyone with an exposure
to elementary mathematics. The course is designed to impart the essential aspects of financial
asset valuation. The students will be introduced to numerical techniques in finance using
spreadsheet programmes such as Microsoft Excel. The course will impart skills that will be
useful in a variety of business settings including investment banks, asset management
companies and in the field of financial and business journalism.
Course Outline
1. Deterministic cash-flow streams
Basic theory of interest; discounting and present value; internal rate of return; evaluation
criteria; fixed-income securities; bond prices and yields; interest rate sensitivity and duration;
immunisation; the term structure of interest rates; yield curves; spot rates and forward rates.
2. Single-period random cash flows
Random asset returns; portfolios of assets; portfolio mean and variance; feasible
combinations of mean and variance; mean-variance portfolio analysis: the Markowitz model
and the two-fund theorem; risk-free assets and the one-fund theorem.
3. Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM)
The capital market line; the capital asset pricing model; the beta of an asset and of a portfolio;
security market line; use of the CAPM model in investment analysis and as a pricing formula.
Readings
1. David G. Luenberger, Investment Science, Oxford University Press, USA, 1997.
2. Richard A. Brealey and Stewart C. Myers, Principles of Corporate Finance, McGrawHill, 7th edition, 2002.
3. Burton G. Malkiel, A Random Walk Down Wall Street, W.W. Norton & Company, 2003.
4. Simon Benninga, Financial Modeling, MIT Press, USA, 1997.
Course Description:
This course introduces the student to collection and presentation of data. It also discusses how
data can be summarized and analysed for drawing statistical inferences. The students will be
introduced to important data sources that are available and will also be trained in the use of free
statistical software to analyse data.
Course Outline:
1. Sources of data. Population census versus sample surveys. Random sampling.
2. Univariate frequency distributions. Measures of central tendency: mean, median and
mode; arithmetic, geometric and harmonic mean. Measures of dispersion, skewness and
kurtosis.
3. Bivariate frequency distribution. Correlation and regression. Rank correlation.
4. Introduction to probability theory. Notions of random experiment, sample space, event,
probability of an event. Conditional probability. Independence of events. Random
variables and probability distributions. Binomial and normal distributions.
5. Estimation of population parameters from sample data. Unbiased estimators for
population mean and variance.
6. Basics of index numbers: price and quantity index numbers.
Readings:
1. P.H. Karmel and M. Polasek (1978), Applied Statistics for Economists, 4th edition,
Pitman.
2. M.R. Spiegel (2003), Theory and Problems of Probability and Statistics (Schaum
Series).