Bachelor of European Studies (BAES). Grado conjunto otorgado por UCM, KUL, UNIBO y JU (Alianza Una Europa)
Undergraduate Programme. Academic Year 2024/2025.
WORLD ECONOMY - 806687
Curso Académico 2024-25
Datos Generales
- Plan de estudios: 081H - BACHELOR OF EUROPEAN STUDIES (2022-23)
- Carácter: Optativa
- ECTS: 6.0
SINOPSIS
COMPETENCIAS
Generales
Transversales
Específicas
ACTIVIDADES DOCENTES
Clases teóricas
- The professor will make presentations, usually with Power Point.
- Sessions will require the participation of the students, via structured discussion or exercises based on the professors presentations and recommended readings.
- You are therefore expected to participate actively in class and demonstrate that you have completed the readings.
Clases prácticas
- The group will be divided into two sub-groups, each of which will attend bi-weekly hour-long practical sessions. In the case of a large group, each sub-group will consist of work teams.
- The assignments (with readings and materials) will be uploaded to the virtual campus in advance.
- You are expected to prepare answers and results beforehand for their presentation and discussion during the practical session, as well as to follow the in-class dynamics instructions that the professor will provide as closely as possible.
Presentaciones
- Each student will choose a book to be read throughout the course from a pool of books proposed by the professor (see below).
- You may send comments about the book as part of your participation in the virtual campus (see above) and there will be an additional activity related to the book. You must record a short video (5-8 minutes) explaining four essential aspects of the book from your point of view:
- the most revealing and correct thesis
- the most controversial or wrong statement
- the units of the syllabus to which the book is most directly related
- the question addressed in the book that you would like to do more research on in the future
- It is therefore expected that you choose and read a book and think about it in relation to the course contents.
Otras actividades
- There will be a forum in the virtual campus for each of the non-theoretical units (units 2, 3, 4, 6, 7, and 8).
- Participation in the forums should be in the form of short posts, and with questions or comments of any kind regarding whatever interests you about each of those units. Examples of what you might post include: comments on the recommended textbook readings, reflections on how the book you are reading (see below) relates to the courses unit; links to websites or online documents and comments about them; reflections on how the unit relates to other contents of the course; reflections on how the unit relates to other academic subjects; comments on how the unit relates to recent events
- Posts should never be summaries of readings assigned for either the unit or the corresponding practical sessions; and they may be isolated or, preferably, in response to what was previously published by a classmate.
- Posts should be between 200 and 500 words; they should be published by 11:00 am on the day before each non-theoretical unit starts (so that we can all read them before the session).
- You are expected (it is compulsory) to participate in the online forums, regarding at least four of the six non-theoretical units that will take place throughout the course.
Presenciales
Semestre
Breve descriptor:
The course provides the necessary information for analyzing today's global economy in a systemic way, including tendencies and contradictions, the behavior of actors, and relations of interdependence.
More specifically, this group will study:
- The defining and differentiating features of various national/regional economies, in terms of their levels and trajectories of income, productive development and socio-economic development, on the one hand, and their participation in the overall world economy, on the other.
- International markets: financial, productive, and commercial focusing on specific markets that are of special relevance in todays world economy, such as energy markets, global value chains in electronics, and financial relations.
- The main actors in the world economy and the rules that, on the one hand, constrain their decisions and, on the other, they themselves set. These are the governments of hegemonic countries, transnational companies, and other organizations that not only participate in exchanges but also have the power to influence the way in which they are organized.
Requisitos
- Is acquainted with basic economic concepts (especially macroeconomic), as well as theoretical relationships between the main economic variables.
- Have some minimal mathematical background, especially the ability to deal with fractions or percentages and to read tables and charts.
- Have general knowledge of contemporary world history.
- Manage Microsoft Office and internet browsers, at the user level.
Objetivos
Goals and skills
The general objective of the course, in terms of cognitive skills (skills related to knowledge), is for students to learn about the main current characteristics of the world economy and their recent evolution, as well as to reflect on the processes that shape it and its socio-economic consequences.
More specifically, the objectives are that students:
- Acquire a conceptual and analytical framework that allows them to question themselves about the world economy in its different dimensions, separately and articulately: countries/regions, markets, and actors and norms.
- Know the main characteristics and recent evolution of the world economy, in relation to these dimensions: productive and socio-economic development (levels and evolution) of countries/regions, markets (finance, production, and trade in various relevant markets) and external economic insertion of countries/regions, and main actors and norms in the international political economy.
- Acquire knowledge about interpretative debates on the processes by which features of the world economy are configured, as well as on the socio-economic consequences of these features.
In addition to the objectives related to cognitive skills, the course aims for students to also acquire transversal (related to how-to-do) and attitudinal (related to how-to-be) skills. More specifically:
- With regard to transversal skills, it is intended that students be able to search, interpret and present quantitative and qualitative information that is useful for knowledge of the world economy; and it is intended that they apply knowledge about the world economy for the interpretation of concrete and current phenomena (for case analysis).
- With regard to attitudinal skills, students are intended to have a reflective and critical attitude towards the processes that shape the world economy, as well as towards the socio-economic challenges that the characteristics and evolution of the economy entail; are able to make judgments about differing interpretations (own or others); and work in coordination and cooperatively with each other.
Contenido
Presentation and introduction to the course. 1. Presentation. 2. Introduction.
Part I. Growth and development in the world economy
Unit 1. A theoretical introduction to growth and development. 1. Growth. 2. Development. 3. Theories of Development.
Unit 2. Growth, development, and the global political economy in stages. 1. Inequality and growth in the world economy. 2. The global political economy in stages: main actors and norms.
Unit 3. Characteristics and dynamics of growth in developed countries. 1. Common features and dynamics. 2. Possible explanations of stages of growth.
Unit 4. Characteristics and dynamics of growth in non-developed countries. 1. Common features and dynamics. 2. Paradigms in development economics: from ISI to beyond the Washington Consensus.
Part II. International economic relations
Unit 5. A theoretical introduction to international economic relations. 1. Production and investment. 2. Trade. 3. Money and finance.
Unit 6. International Production. 1. Transnational Corporations (TNC). 2. Global Value Chains (GVC). 3. Foreign Direct Investment (FDI). 4. Political economy of international production.
Unit 7. International Trade. 1. Structure and evolution of international trade. 2. Commercial Policy. 3. Political economy of international trade.
Unit 8. Exchange Rates, International Monetary System and International Finance. 1. Current features and evolution of exchange rates. 2. International Monetary System. 3. Political economy of international monetary and financial systems.
Evaluación
- Exams. Students must choose one out of 2 alternative options:
-- 2 partial exams: Part I (units 1-4, Oct) + Part II (units 5-8, Dec). (25% each).
-- 1 global exam (units 1-8, Dec or Jan) (50%).
Exams will consist of 2 parts, with short and essay questions respectively.
- Attendance and participation in presentation and discussion sessions (10%).
- Attendance and participation in practical sessions (20%).
- Participation in the online forums and the video about the book (20%).
In July, the same system applies but:
- Students who have not published in the online forum will be given a new deadline to do so.
- The official call comprises Part I and Part II of the course.
Bibliografía
- Cohn, Theodore (2021): Global Political Economy: Theory and Practice, Routledge.
- Oatley, Thomas (2019): International Political Economy, Routledge.
- OBrien, Robert and Williams, Marc (2020): Global Political Economy. Evolution and Dynamics, Red Globe Press.
- Palazuelos, Enrique (dir.) (2015): Economía Política Mundial, Akal, Madrid.
- Ravenhill, John (ed.) (2019): Global Political Economy, Oxford University Press.
Otra información relevante
-Chang, H.J. (2010): 23 Things They Don't Tell You About Capitalism, Bloomsbury Press.
-Di Muzio, T. & Dow, M. (eds.) (2022): Covid-19 and the Global Political Economy: Crises in the 21st Century, RIPE Series in Global Political Economy.
-Frieden, J.A. (2006): Global Capitalism: Its Fall and Rise in the Twentieth Century, W.W. Norton.
Hickel, J. (2018): The Divide. A Brief Guide to Global Inequality and its Solutions, W.W. Norton & Co.
Hudson, M. (2015): Killing the Host, ISLET.
Lechner, F.J. et al. (2000): The Globalization Reader, Malden, MA: Blackwell.
Mazzucato, M. (2018): The Value of Everything: Making and Taking in the Global Economy, Public Affairs.
Mattick, P. (2011): Business as Usual: The Economic Crisis and the Failure of Capitalism, Reaktion Books.
Petits, M; & Klein, M.C. (2020): Trade Wars are Class Wars, Yale University Press.
Rodrik, D. (2011): The Globalization Paradox, W.W. Norton & Co.
Shaikh, A. (dir.) (2007): Globalization and the Myths of Free Trade, Routledge.
Smith, M.E.G.; Butovsky, J.; Watterton, J.J. (2021): Twilight Capitalism, Fernwood Publishing.
-Smith, J. (2016): Imperialism in the 21st Century. Globalization, Super-Exploitation, and Capitalisms Final Crisis, Monthly Review Press.
-Steger, M. (2013): Globalization: A Very Short Introduction, Oxford University Press.
-Stiglitz, J. (2017): Globalization and Its Discontents Revisited, W.W. Norton & Co.
-Suwandi, I. (2019): Value Chains: The New Economic Imperialism, Monthly Review Press.
-Tepper, J. &Hearn, D. (2018): The Myth of Capitalism, John Wiley & Sons.
-Tooze, A. (2019): Crashed: How a Decade of Financial Crises Changed the World, Penguin.
Estructura
Módulos | Materias |
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No existen datos de módulos o materias para esta asignatura. |
Grupos
Clases teóricas y/o prácticas | ||||
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Grupo | Periodos | Horarios | Aula | Profesor |
Grupo único | - | - | - | CLARA BELEN GARCIA FERNANDEZ-MURO MARIO DEL ROSAL CRESPO |