ECON323 - Microeconomic Theory
Course: ECON323 (Microeconomic Theory) in ECON department at Texas A&M University.
Credit Hours: 3 • Academic Level: third-year undergraduate course
Course Requirements: Requires 2 prerequisite courses
Prerequisite Chain Depth: 3 levels of foundational courses required
Future Opportunities: Unlocks 27 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 Texas A&M University, helping students progress through degree requirements.
Courses unlocked by ECON323
- ECON452 - International Trade Theory and Policy
- ECON433 - Energy Markets and Policy
- ECON607 - Foundations of Microeconomic Theory
- ECMT463 - Introduction to Econometrics
- ECON491 - Research
- ECON312 - Poverty, Inequality and Social Policy
- ECON416 - Economics of Microfinance
- AGEC619 - Managerial Economics in Agribusiness
- ECON445 - Financial Economics
- ECON412 - Public Finance
- ECON425 - The Organization of Industry
- ECON459 - Games and Economic Behavior
- ECON465 - Contemporary Economic Issues
- ECON484 - Internship
- AGEC317 - Economic Analysis for Agribusiness Management
- ECON418 - Economics of Labor
- ECON419 - Personnel Economics
- ECON611 - Foundations of Macroeconomic Theory
- ECON414 - Health Economics
- ECON436 - Environmental Economics
- ECON449 - Economics of Decision-Making Strategy
- ECON440 - Experimental Economics
- ECON460 - Introduction to Mathematical Economics
- AGEC620 - Food Security, Climate and Conflict
- ECON421 - Economics of Crime
- ECON420 - Law and Economics
- ECON426 - Economics of Antitrust and Regulation
Academic Planning at Texas A&M University
Students planning ECON323 at Texas A&M University should complete 2 prerequisites before enrollment.
Course Sequence: This course requires a 3-level prerequisite chain, requiring careful multi-semester planning for optimal progression.
Future Pathways: Completing ECON323 enables enrollment in 27 advanced courses for further study
This third-year course at Texas A&M University integrates into structured degree pathways for ECON programs, supporting timely graduation and academic progression.