ECON311 - Principles of Macroeconomics
Course: ECON311 (Principles of Macroeconomics) in ECON department at University of British Columbia.
Credit Hours: 0 • Academic Level: year 0 undergraduate course
Course Requirements: No prerequisites required - suitable for beginning students
Future Opportunities: Unlocks 25 advanced courses for further study
Course Type: Foundation course - forms the base for multiple advanced topics
Part of the ECON curriculum at University of British Columbia, helping students progress through degree requirements.
Courses unlocked by ECON311
- ECON241 - Introduction to Global Development
- ECON305 - Honours Intermediate Macroeconomic Analysis I
- COMR473 - Business Finance
- COMR493 - Strategic Management in Business
- ECON234 - Wealth and Poverty of Nations
- ECON255 - Understanding Globalization
- COMR465 - Marketing Management
- ECON226 - Making Sense of Economic Data
- ECON318 - History and Philosophy of Economics from Aristotle to Adam Smith
- ECON325 - Introduction to Econometrics I
- ECON364 - The Economics of Sustainable Development: Communities, Markets and Technology
- ECON457 - Seminar in International Economic Relations
- ECON392 - Topics in Economics
- ECON317 - Poverty and Inequality
- ECON302 - Intermediate Macroeconomic Analysis I
- ECON333 - Economic History of Europe from the Paleolithic to the Industrial Revolution
- ECON337 - Economic History of the United States
- ECON390 - Introduction to Economic Research
- ECON384 - Economic Analysis of Health Services
- ECON335 - Fertility, Families and Human Migration
- ECON350 - Public Finance Policy Topics
- ECON210 - Microeconomic Policy
- ECON319 - History and Philosophy of Economics from Ricardo to Keynes
- ECON211 - Macroeconomic Policy
- ECON365 - Topics in Canadian Industrial Organization and Regulation Policy
Academic Planning at University of British Columbia
Students planning ECON311 at University of British Columbia should complete 0 prerequisites before enrollment.
Future Pathways: Completing ECON311 enables enrollment in 25 advanced courses, opening specialization opportunities in the ECON program.
This year 0 course at University of British Columbia integrates into structured degree pathways for ECON programs, supporting timely graduation and academic progression.