ECON3020 - Intermediate Microeconomics II: Consumers and General Equilibrium
Course: ECON3020 (Intermediate Microeconomics II: Consumers and General Equilibrium) in ECON department at Carleton University.
Credit Hours: 0.5 • Academic Level: year 0 undergraduate course
Course Requirements: Requires 4 prerequisite courses
Prerequisite Chain Depth: 4 levels of foundational courses required
Future Opportunities: Unlocks 20 advanced courses for further study
Course Type: Core pathway course - critical for degree progression
Part of the ECON curriculum at Carleton University, helping students progress through degree requirements.
Courses unlocked by ECON3020
- ECON4230 - Economic History
- ECON4407 - Project Evaluation
- ECON4601 - International Trade Theory and Policy
- ECON4880 - Special Topics in Economics
- ECON4057 - Behavioural Financial Economics
- ECON4109 - Experimental Economics
- ECON4404 - Public Economics: Taxation
- ECON4052 - Corporate Financial Economics
- ECON4053 - Financial Market Modeling
- ECON4301 - Market Structure and Firm Behaviour
- ECON4302 - Competition and Regulatory Policy
- ECON4360 - Labour Economics
- ECON4460 - Health Economics
- ECON4507 - The Economics of Development
- ECON3900 - Research Methods in Economics
- ECON4020 - Advanced Microeconomic Theory
- ECON4030 - Economics of Uncertainty and Information
- ECON4120 - Strategy and Behaviour
- ECON4508 - International Aspects of Economic Development
- ECON4700 - Measurement Economics
Academic Planning at Carleton University
Students planning ECON3020 at Carleton University should complete 4 prerequisites before enrollment.
Course Sequence: This course requires a 4-level prerequisite chain, requiring careful multi-semester planning for optimal progression.
Future Pathways: Completing ECON3020 enables enrollment in 20 advanced courses, opening specialization opportunities in the ECON program.
This year 0 course at Carleton University integrates into structured degree pathways for ECON programs, supporting timely graduation and academic progression.