Online Text and Notes in Principles of Macroeconomics
Wendy Olsen, Cathie Marsh Centre for Census and Survey Research
Slides, explanation and exercises are arranged into 24 modules aimed primarily at Social Policy, Geography, Housing, Sociology and Demography courses, but tackling economic issues such as the measurement of unemployment. Each module has statistical exercises based on a subset of 1991 UK Census data. As of March 2006, these materials are being updated under the SARs project. Updated modules are appearing there replacing content on this site.
John Sloman, University of the West of England
This companion website for Economics, sixth edition supports the text book by John Sloman. It contains student resources to help those studying courses using this text and lecturer resources for those using this textbook to teach economics courses. Some of the lecturer resources require registration. Materials provided include case studies, lecture plans, animated models and workshop plans.
Biz/ed, Biz/ed, IFS, IFS
This is a detailed model of the UK Economy, based on the H.M. Treasury model, which puts you in the position of Chancellor, showing you the macro- and microeconomic consequences of your budgets. It is part of the Biz/ed site and was produced in collaboration with the Institute for Fiscal Studies. Users can choose to alter a limited number of variables, or the full set. The site also offers background material on macroeconomic theory.
Paul Ormerod, Volterra Consulting
This is a paper on the Tobin tax, considering the aims and effects of the tax in terms of theory and empirical results, specifically written for undergraduates. The author is Paul Ormerod of Volterra Consulting and it is reproduced by the Economics Network with permission.
Mike Moffat, University of Rochester
This is a series of articles to demystify exchange rates for the novice, connecting the topic to the theory of supply and demand.
Orley J Amos, Oklahoma State University
This introductory course in Macroeconomics includes the topics of inflation, unemployment, business cycles, gross domestic product, money, fiscal policy, and monetary policy. There are 20 lessons on macroeconomic basics, broken up into small chunks of text. The AmosWorld site also includes a glossary and an online testing system, to which this material is linked.
Not specified
Ask Dr. Econ is an educational resource that answers questions on (mostly macro) economic issues by a Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco economist: the answer-bank is searchable by category or keyword, and new questions can be submitted. Answers are detailed, generally at introductory level, and stay close to current consensus even though some are 10+ years old. Examples: Does inflation hurt long-term growth? What are business cycles and how do they affect the economy? Why does a trade deficit weaken the currency?
Charles Wyplosz, Michael Burda
Chapter One of Burda and Wyplosz's - Macroeconomics: a European text - is available as a sample chapter to download, "The fundamentals of economic growth" is provided as a PDF file. It provides an overview of economic growth, the concepts used to study it and the factors affecting economic growth in the long run.
Center for Economic and Policy Research
10 lectures by US economists downloadable as streamed video or MP3 audio presentations, with accompanying PowerPoint slides and related papers that pursue the issues in more depth. Two lectures are on growth (Dean Baker, Mark Weisbrot), others on US labour markets (John Schmitt), women in the labour market (Heather Boushey), trade (Mark Weisbrot), intergenerational mobility and life chances (Heather Boushey), the Federal Reserve, asset bubbles and intellectual property (all Dean Baker). The lectures are US-focused and reflect the sometimes market-critical perspective of the Center for Economic Policy and Research, a think-tank founded by Baker and Weisbrot in 1999 with an advisory board including Joseph Stiglitz and Robert Solow (not to be confused with the UK-based Centre for Economic Policy Research).
Addison Wesley
ECON100 offers various resources to support a number of text books authored or co-authored by Michael Parkin. Included are lecture notes (in PowerPoint, HTML or RTF), online quizzes, and news analysis.
BookBoon
This set of free downloadable textbooks is available from BookBoon and they are aimed at UK economics students. The range of titles includes introductory topics such as the basics of international economics, the neo-classical growth model, econometrics and micro/macro analysis. Users are required to fill in brief personal details before they can download the PDF files of the full text of the books. They range in size from about 20 pages to 150 pages and the authors appear to be mainly European.
Joseph Stiglitz, Columbia University, Carl Walsh, University of California, Santa Cruz
This website supports the 3rd edition of Economics by Joseph Stiglitz and Carl Walsh. It contains a vast array of freely available teaching and learning materials for each chapter of the book - including mini lectures, interactive tutorials, quizzes and even crossword puzzles. The site requires that you have the Macromedia Flash plugin for your browser.
Geoffrey Woglom, Amherst College
The files here are 16 short, explanatory essays to accompany Mankiw's Macroeconomics textbook. Readings include "Some simple math facts", "Two versions of Okun's law", "Theories of debt burden", and "The slope of the LM curve and automatic stabilization". Past exams from Woglom's course are also here. This link is to Archive.org's copy of the Spring 2000 site.
Joseph Stiglitz, Columbia University, Carl E Walsh, University of California, Santa Cruz
This is the support website for the 4th edition of Economics by Joseph E. Stiglitz, and Carl E. Walsh, produced by W.W. Norton publishing. The site contains instructors manuals, PowerPoint slides, a glossary of terms, images and testbanks, in .zip format for Windows and .sit for Macs. The site also offers course packs that can be used in the Blackboard VLE platform.
FreeVideoLectures
FreeVideoLectures brings together videos of economics courses from Universities such as Yale and Berkeley, as well as online providers like the Khan Academy. They are arranged by topics, including: international economics, trade, game theory, history of economic thought and economic demography. Items are listed by course enabling students to work through a course chronologically.
Andrew Abel, Ben Bernanke
This is a 37-page sample chapter from the fourth edition of the authors' Macroeconomics textbook by Andrew B. Abel and Ben S. Bernanke, it is available as a PDF file.
Neva Goodwin, Julie Nelson, and Jonathan Harris, Tufts University
This website supports the textbook Macroeconomics in Context by Goodwin et al. It combines mainstream macroeconomic principles with environmental and social considerations, considering alternatives to the conventional GDP measure. Student study guides for each chapter and lecture slides for academics are available.
Mike Moffat, University of Rochester
This is an index to a few dozen short articles for students and lay readers written by Moffat since 2002. Most are answers to questions submitted by students, such as "What Is The Demand For Money?" or "Do Changes in Stock Prices Cause Recessions?"
Mannig Simidian, Harvard University
This is a set of animated PowerPoint presentations, one for each chapter of Mankiw's macro textbook, downloadable as compressed files for PC or for Mac.
Alfred L Norman, University of Texas
This site combines text, images and online quizzes into a survey of the classical and neoclassical paradigms of macroeconomics. It contains a number of interactive quizzes and simulations, as well as, some short text articles on a range of topics.
Nouriel Roubini, Stern School of Business, New York University, David Backus, Stern School of Business, New York University
MBA lectures in macroeconomics by Nouriel Roubini, David Backus includes the text of 10 lectures from 1998, including graphs. The three main sections are "Overview of the World Economy", "The Classical Theory of the Long-Run" and "The Keynesian Theory of the Short-Run". The lectures are aimed at MBA students.
MIT
This course site includes archived lecture notes, exams, assignments and other course materials for undergraduate and graduate-level economics courses from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Economics Department. The undergraduate courses include: Principles of Macroeconomics, Intermediate Applied Microeconomics, Intermediate Microeconomic Theory, Intermediate Applied Macroeconomics, Intermediate Macroeconomic Theory, Economic Applications of Game Theory, Economics and Psychology, Industrial Organization and Public Policy, Government Regulation of Industry, Economics and E-commerce, Industrial Organization I, Econometrics, Economics Research and Communication, Public Economics, Foundations of Development Policy, Competition in Telecommunications, and Political Economy I: Theories of the State and the Economy. The graduate-level courses are: Microeconomic Theory II, Microeconomic Theory III, Microeconomic Theory IV, Game Theory, Behavioral Economics and Finance, Dynamic Optimization & Economic Applications (Recursive Methods), Time Series Analysis, Macroeconomic Theory I, Macroeconomic Theory II, Macroeconomic Theory III, Macroeconomic Theory IV, Advanced Macroeconomics II, Public Economics I, Public Economics II, Labor Economics I, Economic History, Competition in Telecommunications, and Development Economics: Microeconomic Issues and Policy Models.
Colin Danby, University of Washington, Bothell
Archived on this site are lecture notes and images used in various courses given by Danby. Macroeconomic topics are: Macroeconomic flows for a closed and open economy; Macro notes (for Money supply, Money demand, Goods and money markets, and Aggregate demand and supply); Classical, Keynesian, and Monetarist theory; the "Classical" or fixed-output model; the IS-LM tutorial; and the Kalecki model. Microeconomic topics are: Consumer and producer surplus, Price determination, a Market model quiz, and the Todaro migration model. The Balance of Payments and Exchange Rates section contains the following material: Categories and definitions, Fundamental concepts, Relating the balance of payments to macro categories, and Exchange rates. The trade section contains material on: Introduction, Ricardian trade theory, Heckscher-Ohlin-Samuelson trade theory, Tariffs, Quotas, a trade quiz, and Annotated tariff and quota problems.
Mike Moffat, University of Rochester
This short essay makes a case in simple terms that tariffs hurt the economy of the country that imposes them as well as the economies of the countries they are imposed on.
Mike Moffat, University of Rochester
This is an introductory essay about the processes by which the level of taxation affects overall economic growth, split into five HTML pages.
Mike Moffat, University of Rochester
This short essay uses quotes from "The Logic of Collective Action" by Mancur Olson to explain in simple terms why government can be expected to make decisions that harm the economy. It introduces the concept of the different marginal effect of participation in small and large groups.
Wei-Choun Yu, Winona State University
This is a support website for the teaching of Wei-Choun Yu, Assistant Professor of Economics at Winona State University. It contains teaching materials for Macroeconomics, International Economics and Forecasting Methods. The individual course pages include syllabi, assignments, lecture slides and other materials. Each course page also includes brief links to external Internet sites.


