ECON201 - Microeconomic Theory I: Competitive Behavior
Course: ECON201 (Microeconomic Theory I: Competitive Behavior) in ECON department at Simon Fraser University.
Credit Hours: 4 • Academic Level: second-year undergraduate course
Course Requirements: Requires 8 prerequisite courses
Prerequisite Chain Depth: 2 levels of foundational courses required
Future Opportunities: Unlocks 24 advanced courses for further study
Interdisciplinary Requirements: Prerequisites span 2 different departments
Course Type: Core pathway course - critical for degree progression
Part of the ECON curriculum at Simon Fraser University, helping students progress through degree requirements.
Courses unlocked by ECON201
- BUS313 - Corporate Finance
- BUS315 - Investments
- BUS478 - Strategy
- ECON220W - Communication in Economics
- ECON305 - Intermediate Macroeconomic Theory
- ECON409W - Seminar in Economic Thought
- ECON410 - Seminar in Monetary Theory
- ECON443 - Seminar in International Trade
- ECON446 - Seminar in International Finance
- ECON450W - Seminar in Quantitative Economic History
- ECON498 - Directed Studies
- ECON431 - Intermediate Mathematical Economics
- ECON325 - Industrial Organization
- ECON381 - Labor Economics
- ECON392 - Public Economics: Role of Government
- ECON393 - Public Economics: Taxation
- ECON427W - Industrial Organization: Law and Economics
- ECON435 - Econometric Methods
- ECON437 - Seminar in Urban Economics
- ECON453 - Seminar in the Economics of Education
- ECON454W - Seminar in the Economics of the Family
- BUS307 - Business Applications of Game Theory
- ECON470 - Seminar in Health Economics
- ECON302 - Microeconomic Theory II: Strategic Behavior
Academic Planning at Simon Fraser University
Students planning ECON201 at Simon Fraser University should complete 8 prerequisites before enrollment.
Future Pathways: Completing ECON201 enables enrollment in 24 advanced courses, opening specialization opportunities in the ECON program.
This second-year course at Simon Fraser University integrates into structured degree pathways for ECON programs, supporting timely graduation and academic progression.