COMM295 - Managerial Economics
Course: COMM295 (Managerial Economics) in COMM department at University of British Columbia.
Credit Hours: 0 • Academic Level: second-year undergraduate course
Course Requirements: Requires 2 prerequisite courses
Prerequisite Chain Depth: 1 level of foundational courses required
Future Opportunities: Unlocks 27 advanced courses for further study
Course Type: Core pathway course - critical for degree progression
Part of the COMM curriculum at University of British Columbia, helping students progress through degree requirements.
Courses unlocked by COMM295
- ECON421 - Introduction to Game Theory and Applications
- FRE394 - Environment, Society and Government
- ECON466 - The Economics of Government Regulation of Business
- ECON485 - Political Economy
- ECON447 - Monetary Theory
- COMM407 - Real Estate Economics
- COMM444 - Air Transportation
- ECON490 - Seminar in Applied Economics
- ECON472 - Economics of Renewable Resources
- ECON406 - Topics in Microeconomics
- ECON407 - Topics in Macroeconomics
- ECON420 - Optimization and Economic Theory
- ECON451 - Economics of Public Expenditures
- ECON303 - Intermediate Microeconomics II
- ECON455 - International Trade
- ECON441 - The Process of Economic Development
- ECON473 - Economics of Climate Change
- COMM307 - Real Estate Investment
- ECON442 - Issues in Economic Development
- ECON467 - Economics of Crime and Policing
- COMM306 - Urban Land Economics
- ECON450 - Economics of Taxation
- ECON465 - Market Structure
- ECON482 - The Economic Consequences of Religion
- ECON460 - Economics of Labour Markets
- COMM446 - Transportation Economics
- ECON471 - Economics of Nonrenewable Resources
Academic Planning at University of British Columbia
Students planning COMM295 at University of British Columbia should complete 2 prerequisites before enrollment.
Future Pathways: Completing COMM295 enables enrollment in 27 advanced courses for further study
This second-year course at University of British Columbia integrates into structured degree pathways for COMM programs, supporting timely graduation and academic progression.