Curriculum(s) for 2024 - Economics and Finance (32931)
1st year
Lesson | Semester | CFU | SSD | Language | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1013710 | Business Administration | 1st | 9 | SECS-P/07 | ITA | |
Educational objectives The course provides students with a basic knowledge of private entities, profit and no-profit, in relation to the characteristics, operation, economy, business and funding sources. It also aims to introduce the concepts of income and capital through the use of quantitative tools and accounting. LEARNING OUTCOMES Foreground Students who have passed the examination will be able to apply fundamental knowledge gained about the private entities, profit and no-profit, particularly with regard to characteristics, operation, economy, business and funding sources. Acquired skills Students who have passed the examination will be able to understand the variables that guide the behaviour and decisions of entities and, in particular, will acquire the skills necessary to assess the affordability and financial viability of business plans. Students who have passed the examination will also manage accounting operations in order to prepare the financial statements, to interpret the results achieved by companies and to evaluate their performance. | |||||
1013718 | PRINCIPLES OF PUBLC LAW | 1st | 9 | IUS/09 | ITA | |
Educational objectives Knowledge and understanding: the course aims to provide students with the tools that allow them to understand the fundamentals of the Italian public law, taking the Republican Constitution as an essential point of reference; since the teaching is aimed at students of an economics course, the theme of social rights will be object of particular attention during the lessons and for the purpose of the exam. | |||||
1013719 | MATHEMATICS BASE COURSE | 1st | 9 | SECS-S/06 | ITA | |
Educational objectives The main objective of the course is to provide the mathematical basis for understanding and formalizing the economic, financial and business subjects covered by the degree course as well as the quantitative tools necessary for the development of the related applications. A. Knowledge and understanding Students who pass the exam will know the definitions, concepts and methods of calculation object of the program, but above all the logical-intuitive reasoning, the demonstrations and the geometric interpretations necessary for the understanding of their concrete meaning and for their application. In particular, they will know: the definition of a system of linear equations and the fundamental theorem for its solution; the definition of real function of a real variable and the characteristics of the different types of functions; the concepts of limit, derivative and integral and the relative theorems, properties and methods of calculation; the definition of real function of several real variables and the calculation of partial derivatives. B. Applied knowledge and understanding Students who pass the exam will know how to set up and solve a system of linear equations and will be able to discuss the result when a given parameter changes. They will be able to study the main "characters" of a function (such as, for example, existence, sign, behavior at extremes, continuity, derivability, monotonicity, concavity and convexity, integrability), to graphically represent the behavior and resolve some geometric problems connected. Finally, they will be able to calculate the partial derivatives of a real function of several real variables. C. Making judgment Students will develop the aptitude for mathematical reasoning, the ability to use formal language, the ability to argue the validity of a result through a rigorous demonstration and the ability to interpret and explain a phenomenon through a graphical representation. D. Communication skills The exam consists of a written test and an oral test. Students who pass the exam will then be able to solve the exercises assigned during the written test but also discuss the carrying out of the exercises. In particular, they will be able to motivate the methods of calculation used and justify and interpret the results obtained through an explicit reference to the theoretical topics covered by the program. E. Learning skills The students will have the necessary mathematical bases to support the other quantitative area exams included in the three-year degree course, but also the tools useful for formalizing, understanding, explaining and solving some simple problems of the teachings of other areas. | |||||
1013712 | Political Economy | 2nd | 9 | SECS-P/01 | ITA | |
Educational objectives General goals The aim of the course is to illustrate the basic concepts of modern economic theory. In the frontal lessons, the exposition of theoretical issues is integrated with the description of the main features of contemporary economies. The first part of the course examines the consumer choice theory and the theory of the firm in order to clarify the forces that determine prices and quantities in the markets. The analysis is based on the study of both the individual choices and interaction among economic agents under different market regimes (perfect competition, monopoly). The second part deals with the functioning of economic systems seen as a whole. The aim is to provide the tools for the analysis and explanation of the evolution of the main macroeconomic variables (GDP, employment, consumption, investment, public budget, rates of interests). Specific goals More in detail, the course aims at allowing the student: A) to develop adequate basic knowledge and understanding in the field of Economics; | |||||
1013717 | PRIVATE LAW INSTITUTIONS | 2nd | 9 | IUS/01 | ITA | |
Educational objectives The course of Institutions of Private Law is designed to enable students learning fundamental concepts of private law; the complex rules that govern relations between individuals and between individuals and Public Administration where the latter acts privatorum jure, or as private individual and without the exercise of its powers which are authoritative. The knowledge of the foundations of private law supposes several methodological choices, which will be devoted to the completion of the first part of the course to allow the acquisition of all the tools needed to interpret legal texts and understand the functioning of the legal syllogism . Which, according to the methodological path that is suggested, is divided into major premise, minor premise and conclusion. Particular attention will be given the right of contract law and contracts, which are key institutions in the formation of both the professional and managerial functions of those who, wishing to continue their studies, wish to acquire skills to undertake the auditors, accountants and business professionals. Central, therefore, the role of movement and legal instruments mortis causa and inter vivos that this system relies on the production and exchange of goods and services. Foreground: Students who have passed the examination will be able to apply the institutional knowledge to interpret a law to check what the legal consequences of a certain conduct of individuals, to distinguish the main rights over things. Will also be able to understand the main legal instruments movement, judged on individual circumstances of each case, what tools should be considered preferable in order to meet the needs that from time to time arise, identifying, so also features the choice of a differential rather than another instrument. Acquired skills: Students who have passed the examination will be able to make a basic legal advice on privatization issues, people's rights, family law, succession law, the right property, the law of obligations and contracts. Will also be able to conduct a technical institutional trading, and assesses the legal and economic implications, suggesting that the best solution. Will finally be able to write the text of the elementary exchange or associations to prepare the text of the main package of unilateral acts and an elementary holographic will, in accordance with the rules. | |||||
1013723 | ACCOUNTING | 2nd | 9 | SECS-P/07 | ITA | |
Educational objectives The course is designed to provide a basic understanding about the preparation of financial statements in light of Italian law. At the end of the course, student should demonstrate to be able to prepare financial statements according to law. Specifically, is requested the ability to understand the basic approach to the definition of income and equity, to record transactions, to measure assets and liabilities according to Italian rules, to prepare the documents that constitute financial statements. | |||||
AAF1212 | ENGLISH LANGUAGE - B2 | 2nd | 6 | N/D, N/D | ITA | |
Educational objectives In line with the curricula of the Faculty’s course programmes, the B2 English course is aimed at developing both written and oral skills in the academic and professional subject areas relevant to the student’s own specialized, undergraduate fields of study. Course activities make extensive use of audiovisual materials and computer-mediated aids. In particular, this focus on English for specific purposes is placed in a socio-cultural context, in which intercultural variables and the significance of English as an academic and professional lingua franca are explored: students will therefore encounter a large variety of texts produced in a wide range of contexts of use. |
2nd year
Lesson | Semester | CFU | SSD | Language | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1017517 | Economic Policy | 1st | 9 | SECS-P/02 | ITA | |
Educational objectives Teaching goals The Economic Policy course aims at teaching the main reasons why the State takes actions to govern the economy as well as the objectives the State should set and the specific measures that should be taken in order to achieve such objectives. To this end, students are, first of all, introduced to the reasons why free markets may fail to lead to efficiency and to outcomes that are acceptable according to widely shared conceptions of equity. Subsequently, they will learn the properties of a rational model of economic policy and will become acquainted with the various policy measures that in each case may correct market failures. Such measures will be distinguished according to their micro or macroeconomic nature and to their applicability to a closed or an open economy. Finally, students will also learn the reasons that explain why policy intervention itself may fail distinguishing between the case of badly designed policies and opportunism on the part of either policy makers or bureaucrats. Acquired knowledge Students passing the Economic Policy exam know which role the State should play in modern economic systems; the goals it should pursue under every circumstance and the measure it should take in order to achieve its goals in a consistent way and in the more efficient way. Moreover, successful students know the role that both in Italy and in the more advanced countries the State has actually played, its successes and the open problems it now faces. They also learn how globalization impacta upon national economic policies and the advantages and diffficulties of an international coordination of national policies. This acquired knowledge is necessary both to those who wish to continue studying economics and those who wish to enter the labour market after the Laurea. Acquired skills Students passing the exam are able to identify the main features of a public policy which should be effective and efficient; they can understand the main ongoing debates on the role that the State should play, in particular with reference to fiscal policy; the can also understand the decisions taken both by national and international bodies and predict their likely effects on several economic variables; they can read and largely understand several reports by national and international bodies, like the Bank of Italy, the Ministry of Economy, IMF, Oecd, etc. Finally they may read not too difficult scientific papers. | |||||
1006627 | FINANCIAL SCIENCE | 1st | 9 | SECS-P/03 | ITA | |
Educational objectives This course is designed to help students to achieve a solid grasp of the theory of public finance by applying the basic tools of microeconomics. The course trains students in areas relevant to the needs of business and government's institutions and provides the necessary background for advanced graduate studies. | |||||
1015450 | BASIC STATISTICS | 1st | 9 | SECS-S/01 | ITA | |
Educational objectives Provide students with a basic knowledge of descriptive and inferential Statistics. Students must be able to choose the right tools for basic statistical analysis and their main properties. Students must also be able to apply statistical instruments in different situations and explain correctly the achieved results. | |||||
1016862 | COMPLEMENTARY COURSE IN POLITICAL ECONOMY | 2nd | 6 | SECS-P/01 | ITA | |
Educational objectives The course seeks to enhance students’ knowledge on economics with coverage of both micro and macroeconomics at an intermediate level. The study of models in order to understand how economies work will also take advantage of analytical tools and great emphasis will be placed on empirical evidence obtained on economic data. This will allow students to identify – by means of economic analysis – the determinants of the economic developments observed in real world and the links between economic variables. After passing the exam, students will be able to understand the major micro and macroeconomic models and use them for analyzing in details the economic phenomena, interpreting what happens in real economic world, and participating to the economic policy debate. SKILLS ACHIEVED: Thanks to the course attendance, after passing the exam the student acquires knowledge on a vast arrays of issues which can be fruitfully applied in a large number of professional contexts in the economic and financial sector. Moreover, the knowledge acquired will allow them to fully understand economic reports drafted by economists in policy institutions and a large part of scientific papers in economics both theoretical and empirical. This will allow students to draft themselves studies on economic issues, also dealing with their economic policy aspects. | |||||
1017104 | BUSINESS AND MANAGEMENT | 2nd | 9 | SECS-P/08 | ITA | |
Educational objectives The course means to treat the firm in the systemic perspective, with a particular reference to the government aspects and value creation, planning of the structure and risk management in its financial dynamics. The study programme is going to foresee also a close examination about the specificity of the Italian firm and its governance. | |||||
1017255 | ECONOMIC HISTORY | 2nd | 6 | SECS-P/12 | ITA | |
Educational objectives Acquired knowledge The course highlights the main transformations of the Italian and European economy, inserted into the framework of the World economy, from the first industrial revolution to the European integration. The economic history course provides students with comprehension of the operation of the economic system and critical skills. Students acquire also the necessary tools to analize economic development in the very long term. Acquired skills Students at the Faculty of Economics are used with notional models and hence can be oriented to extremely simplify the real world. Whereas, by studying the development paths of the XIX and XX century European countries from a historical perspective, students will be able to recover the idea that the real world is more complex than the notional models would predict | |||||
THREE-DIMENSIONAL MODELING |
3rd year
Lesson | Semester | CFU | SSD | Language | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
98422 | Economics of development | 1st | 9 | SECS-P/01 | ITA | |
Educational objectives The aim of the course is to introduce the students with a basic knowledge of economics to the analysis of development processes. The course intends to provides the students with the theoretical and analytical tools to explore the development and underdevelopment processes. A major aim is also the development of a historical and economic perspective to the analysis of development and underdevelopment. | |||||
98431 | INTERNATIONAL ECONOMY | 1st | 9 | SECS-P/01 | ITA | |
Educational objectives Formative targets The students who pass the exam will be able to apply the notions studied in the course to the more and more complex economic phenomena, both real and financial, that characterize all open economies. The course is divided into three parts: the first part of the course will introduce some basic notions, such as the foreign exchange market and exchange rate regimes, the international monetary system, the interest parity conditions, the balance of payments and national accounts; the second part will explore the theory of the monetary international economics and will present issues such as the balance of payments adjustment mechanisms, the theories of exchange rate determination, the international capital flows and the problems of the international monetary system; the third part will study the theory and the empirical analysis of international trade and, in particular, the determinants of the international trade patterns (classical, neoclassical and new trade theories), trade policy, globalization and multinational enterprises. Expected learning results The students who pass the exam will be able to understand the causes and consequences of the international economic relations, as regards both the monetary and financial flows and the international flows of goods. Students will explore the most important issues in the actual international economy, such as the external debt sustainability, the international repercussions, the financial and exchange rate crises, the effects of the market internationalization, the economic policies in open economy, and the balance of payment adjustment mechanisms. Students will also learn how to analyze the international determinants of the observed dynamics of the macroeconomic variables, such as real and nominal exchange rate, interest rate, current account, saving and investment, and their interactions. | |||||
Elective course | 1st | 6 | N/D | ITA | |
1001651 | ADMINISTRATIVE LAW | 2nd | 9 | IUS/10 | ITA | |
Educational objectives General objectives The course aims to provide, through the analysis of the main general concepts, the basic knowledge which allows student to deal with the sources of administrative law and to understand the main features of administrative institutions and their functions, with particular regard to the relationship between citizens and public bodies. First part: Administrative law: history and development. The sources of administrative law. Administrative power: nature and principles. Public functions. The relationship between individuals and public administrations. Second part: Administrative action and administrative decisions. Elements, types, invalidity. Administrative procedure; public property; accountability and administrative justice. Specific Objectives The course aims at allowing students to acquire the knowledge of the main institutional aspects of the subject, with particular regard to the evolving dynamics of the relationship between the citizen and public bodies. This will allow students to deal with the main contemporary issues in administrative law and to follow the current doctrinal debate on them. | |||||
10606557 | ECONOMICS AND INSTITUTIONS OF THE EUROPEAN UNION | 2nd | 6 | SECS-P/01 | ITA | |
Educational objectives The course describes the economic and institutional process that led to the construction of the European Union. Students, after passing the exam, will be able to define and analyse the economic and social impact of EU institutions and policies. After providing basic theoretical tools useful for understanding the characteristics and economic implications of the European Union, students will be given an overview of the key institutions that characterize the Union with reference to the role they play in explaining the economic dynamics of the area and illustrating the main mechanisms of their decision making. | |||||
Elective course | 2nd | 6 | N/D | ITA | |
AAF1001 | FINAL EXAM | 2nd | 3 | N/D | ITA | |
Educational objectives the final exam consists of the presentation of an essay related to the activities conducted during the stage/Thesis-Work. | |||||
New group | |||||
THREE-DIMENSIONAL MODELING |
Optional groups
Lesson | Year | Semester | CFU | SSD | Language |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1017493 | DEMOGRAPHY | 2nd | 2nd | 9 | SECS-S/04 | ITA |
Educational objectives GOALS | |||||
1017178 | ADVANCED STATISTICAL METHODS | 2nd | 2nd | 9 | SECS-S/01 | ITA |
Educational objectives Students will be able to use theoretical and practical tools to model real phenomena. They will use the R statistical package to analyze real data. Students will be able to build a statistical model and to make inference |
Lesson | Year | Semester | CFU | SSD | Language |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1017137 | Economic geography | 3rd | 1st | 9 | M-GGR/02 | ITA |
Educational objectives Knowledge The students should able to know and understand the process that contribute to the present configuration of social, economic, and territorial relations of several world countries. Skills The students should able to know the territorial configuration of main economic sector, which there are important process of integration between countries and world regions, and at the same time, considerable differentiation of economic development. Other skills gained are about urban complexity, environmental question, regional planning and knowledge on main aspects of geoeconomic cartography. | |||||
1027102 | ENGLISH LANGUAGE - C1 | 3rd | 1st | 9 | L-LIN/12 | ENG |
Educational objectives General goals Specific goals |
Lesson | Year | Semester | CFU | SSD | Language |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1009302 | International law | 3rd | 1st | 6 | IUS/13 | ITA |
Educational objectives The accelerating globalization of law and legal practice places important new demands on legal education. To help students understand law in a global context, the international law curriculum integrates introductory level courses with electives in the areas of institutional law, international environmental law, trade law and human rights law. Results | |||||
1018153 | PUBLIC LAW OF THE ECONOMY | 3rd | 1st | 6 | IUS/05 | ITA |
Educational objectives The course aims to analyse the general public law issues of the economy, such as de-Woody from dictation and between them, then focusing on principles governing State intervention in the economy; the course therefore has as purpose to provide the basics of the State, the local legal system, national, European and international levels; principles governing the functioning of the organs to constitutional relevance and functioning of public administration within the market, and anything with regard particularly to the intervention of the public power in banking and financial law. | |||||
1013874 | LABOUR ECONOMICS | 3rd | 1st | 6 | SECS-P/02 | ITA |
Educational objectives General objectives. In summary, the general objective is to show the role of market mechanisms and the main institutions typical of the labour market in determining the variables of primary interest for social welfare, in terms of both efficiency and equity. Firstly, the course provides knowledge of the basic theoretical models for understanding the functioning of the labour market and its institutions, and the main determinants of employment, wages and unemployment. The theory presented covers first the demand, supply and equilibrium models under conditions of perfect competition, but also includes the main deviations from this model both in theory and with reference to observable reality. From the point of view of theory, the course is mainly at the microeconomic level but it also emphasises the connections with macroeconomic equilibrium, in particular with reference to unemployment. Furthermore, the course provides an introduction to the basic concepts and indicators necessary for the description and empirical analysis of the phenomena concerning labour in advanced economies, and the main stylised facts (as for employment, unemployment, wages in aggregate and their main differentiation by territorial area, gender, age, education), with reference to the Italian reality and that of the main countries comparable to it, at present and its evolution in the recent past. Insofar as the main variables concerning labour are the subject of economic policy choices by governments, the course aims to enable students to develop a broad vision and a critical capacity to compare the various theoretical models with each other and these models with the real issues. With regard to the specific contents of the course, after introducing labour supply and demand and the competitive equilibrium, as well as its properties of efficiency and equity, some policies such as the minimum wage and payroll taxes are considered, whose redistributive effects and those on employment and unemployment levels are considered. Furthermore, the theory of discrimination and some tools for its empirical analysis are introduced. On the labour supply side, the course includes the theory of human capital, which describes the motivations behind individual educational choices and predicts their consequences in terms of wages. Workplace training of workers is also considered. In addition, the theory of international migration is presented with a focus on its effects in the labour markets of the receiving countries. The course then goes on to present the main deviations from the perfectly competitive labour market. First, the case of the presence of trade unions and collective bargaining and the analysis of their consequences in terms of wages and employment. Secondly, the case of market power on the corporate side, with the so-called monopsony model. Finally, some relevant macroeconomic models, the concept of steady-state unemployment equilibrium and the Beveridge curve will also be presented with particular reference to the unemployment issue. In the course, exercises are planned to apply the main models with quantitative examples and exercises. In addition, a number of concrete cases relating to issues of particular relevance in Italy or other comparable countries will be presented, showing the data describing the phenomenon, its evolution over time and discussing the policies proposed or applied in view of the objectives set. Specific objectives. More specifically, the course aims to provide the student with: | |||||
1018171 | ECONOMICS AND POLITICS OF WELFARE STATE | 3rd | 1st | 6 | SECS-P/02 | ITA |
Educational objectives The course aims at providing the knowledge of history, theories and economic models for the running of institutions and welfare state systems. The instruments provided are especially functional to operate: The acquisition of the knowledge aimed to deepen economic, social and institutional issues at the local, national and international level. | |||||
1017153 | FRENCH LANGUAGE | 3rd | 1st | 6 | L-LIN/04 | ITA |
Educational objectives The learning objectives of the French language course are to lead the student to: 1. Acquire the necessary skills to communicate easily about various aspects of every day life and also in specific study and work situations in French. 2. Investigate aspects of French civilization and culture. 3. Familiarize themselves with the socio-economic lexicon through authentic texts. 4. Develop learning strategies in order to improve language skills, with a view to lifelong learning. The objectives can be defined in terms of the following levels of the Common European Framework of Reference (CEFR): • comprehension of written messages B2 • comprehension of oral messages B2 • production of written texts B1 • production of oral messages B1 (The descriptive content of the skills defined for the various levels is available at: in French (http://europass.cedefop.europa.eu/LanguageSelfAssessmentGrid/fr) in Italian (http://europass.cedefop.europa.eu/LanguageSelfAssessmentGrid/it) . EXPECTED LEARNING OUTCOMES Students who have passed the examination will possess: • a mastery of the French language in daily life and study and professional communicative situations. • a knowledge of the most important cultural aspects of French-speaking countries; • learning strategies which allow them to continue the learning of French in an independent way. | |||||
1017155 | SPANISH LANGUAGE | 3rd | 1st | 6 | L-LIN/07 | ITA |
Educational objectives The objectives can be defined in terms of the following levels of the Common European Framework of Reference for Foreign Languages(CEFR): • oral and written comprehension B2/C1. | |||||
1031664 | HISTORY OF ECONOMIC ANALYSIS | 3rd | 1st | 6 | SECS-P/01 | ITA |
Educational objectives The course aims at examining the two alternative approaches to the theory of value and income distribution that we find in the history of economic analysis: the approach of the classical economists, based on the notion of ‘social surplus’, and the approach of the marginalist (or ‘neoclassical’) economists, which relies on demand and supply functions for factors of production. As regards the classical economists, we shall first examine the early contributions of F. Quesnay, A. Smith, D. Ricardo and K. Marx, and then the modern version of classical theory. As regards the marginalist theory of value and distribution, attention will primarily be focused on the traditional version based on the notion of ‘capital’ as a factor of production. The last part of the course, however, will briefly examine the different version put forward by L. Walras and revived by current general equilibrium theory. Specific goals |
1st year
Lesson | Semester | CFU | SSD | Language | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1013710 | BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION | 1st | 9 | SECS-P/07 | ITA | |
Educational objectives The course provides students with a basic knowledge of private entities, profit and no-profit, in relation to the characteristics, operation, economy, business and funding sources. It also aims to introduce the concepts of income and capital through the use of quantitative tools and accounting. LEARNING OUTCOMES Foreground Students who have passed the examination will be able to apply fundamental knowledge gained about the private entities, profit and no-profit, particularly with regard to characteristics, operation, economy, business and funding sources. Acquired skills Students who have passed the examination will be able to understand the variables that guide the behaviour and decisions of entities and, in particular, will acquire the skills necessary to assess the affordability and financial viability of business plans. Students who have passed the examination will also manage accounting operations in order to prepare the financial statements, to interpret the results achieved by companies and to evaluate their performance. | |||||
1013718 | PRINCIPLES OF PUBLC LAW | 1st | 9 | IUS/09 | ITA | |
Educational objectives Knowledge and understanding: the course aims to provide students with the tools that allow them to understand the fundamentals of the Italian public law, taking the Republican Constitution as an essential point of reference; since the teaching is aimed at students of an economics course, the theme of social rights will be object of particular attention during the lessons and for the purpose of the exam. | |||||
1013719 | MATHEMATICS BASE COURSE | 1st | 9 | SECS-S/06 | ITA | |
Educational objectives The main objective of the course is to provide the mathematical basis for understanding and formalizing the economic, financial and business subjects covered by the degree course as well as the quantitative tools necessary for the development of the related applications. A. Knowledge and understanding Students who pass the exam will know the definitions, concepts and methods of calculation object of the program, but above all the logical-intuitive reasoning, the demonstrations and the geometric interpretations necessary for the understanding of their concrete meaning and for their application. In particular, they will know: the definition of a system of linear equations and the fundamental theorem for its solution; the definition of real function of a real variable and the characteristics of the different types of functions; the concepts of limit, derivative and integral and the relative theorems, properties and methods of calculation; the definition of real function of several real variables and the calculation of partial derivatives. B. Applied knowledge and understanding Students who pass the exam will know how to set up and solve a system of linear equations and will be able to discuss the result when a given parameter changes. They will be able to study the main "characters" of a function (such as, for example, existence, sign, behavior at extremes, continuity, derivability, monotonicity, concavity and convexity, integrability), to graphically represent the behavior and resolve some geometric problems connected. Finally, they will be able to calculate the partial derivatives of a real function of several real variables. C. Making judgment Students will develop the aptitude for mathematical reasoning, the ability to use formal language, the ability to argue the validity of a result through a rigorous demonstration and the ability to interpret and explain a phenomenon through a graphical representation. D. Communication skills The exam consists of a written test and an oral test. Students who pass the exam will then be able to solve the exercises assigned during the written test but also discuss the carrying out of the exercises. In particular, they will be able to motivate the methods of calculation used and justify and interpret the results obtained through an explicit reference to the theoretical topics covered by the program. E. Learning skills The students will have the necessary mathematical bases to support the other quantitative area exams included in the three-year degree course, but also the tools useful for formalizing, understanding, explaining and solving some simple problems of the teachings of other areas. | |||||
1013712 | Political Economy | 2nd | 9 | SECS-P/01 | ITA | |
Educational objectives General goals The aim of the course is to illustrate the basic concepts of modern economic theory. In the frontal lessons, the exposition of theoretical issues is integrated with the description of the main features of contemporary economies. The first part of the course examines the consumer choice theory and the theory of the firm in order to clarify the forces that determine prices and quantities in the markets. The analysis is based on the study of both the individual choices and interaction among economic agents under different market regimes (perfect competition, monopoly). The second part deals with the functioning of economic systems seen as a whole. The aim is to provide the tools for the analysis and explanation of the evolution of the main macroeconomic variables (GDP, employment, consumption, investment, public budget, rates of interests). Specific goals More in detail, the course aims at allowing the student: A) to develop adequate basic knowledge and understanding in the field of Economics; | |||||
1013717 | PRIVATE LAW INSTITUTIONS | 2nd | 9 | IUS/01 | ITA | |
Educational objectives The course of Institutions of Private Law is designed to enable students learning fundamental concepts of private law; the complex rules that govern relations between individuals and between individuals and Public Administration where the latter acts privatorum jure, or as private individual and without the exercise of its powers which are authoritative. The knowledge of the foundations of private law supposes several methodological choices, which will be devoted to the completion of the first part of the course to allow the acquisition of all the tools needed to interpret legal texts and understand the functioning of the legal syllogism . Which, according to the methodological path that is suggested, is divided into major premise, minor premise and conclusion. Particular attention will be given the right of contract law and contracts, which are key institutions in the formation of both the professional and managerial functions of those who, wishing to continue their studies, wish to acquire skills to undertake the auditors, accountants and business professionals. Central, therefore, the role of movement and legal instruments mortis causa and inter vivos that this system relies on the production and exchange of goods and services. Foreground: Students who have passed the examination will be able to apply the institutional knowledge to interpret a law to check what the legal consequences of a certain conduct of individuals, to distinguish the main rights over things. Will also be able to understand the main legal instruments movement, judged on individual circumstances of each case, what tools should be considered preferable in order to meet the needs that from time to time arise, identifying, so also features the choice of a differential rather than another instrument. Acquired skills: Students who have passed the examination will be able to make a basic legal advice on privatization issues, people's rights, family law, succession law, the right property, the law of obligations and contracts. Will also be able to conduct a technical institutional trading, and assesses the legal and economic implications, suggesting that the best solution. Will finally be able to write the text of the elementary exchange or associations to prepare the text of the main package of unilateral acts and an elementary holographic will, in accordance with the rules. | |||||
1013723 | ACCOUNTING | 2nd | 9 | SECS-P/07 | ITA | |
Educational objectives The course is designed to provide a basic understanding about the preparation of financial statements in light of Italian law. At the end of the course, student should demonstrate to be able to prepare financial statements according to law. Specifically, is requested the ability to understand the basic approach to the definition of income and equity, to record transactions, to measure assets and liabilities according to Italian rules, to prepare the documents that constitute financial statements. | |||||
AAF1212 | ENGLISH LANGUAGE - B2 | 2nd | 6 | N/D, N/D | ITA | |
Educational objectives In line with the curricula of the Faculty’s course programmes, the B2 English course is aimed at developing both written and oral skills in the academic and professional subject areas relevant to the student’s own specialized, undergraduate fields of study. Course activities make extensive use of audiovisual materials and computer-mediated aids. In particular, this focus on English for specific purposes is placed in a socio-cultural context, in which intercultural variables and the significance of English as an academic and professional lingua franca are explored: students will therefore encounter a large variety of texts produced in a wide range of contexts of use. |
2nd year
Lesson | Semester | CFU | SSD | Language | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1017517 | Economic Policy | 1st | 9 | SECS-P/02 | ITA | |
Educational objectives Teaching goals The Economic Policy course aims at teaching the main reasons why the State takes actions to govern the economy as well as the objectives the State should set and the specific measures that should be taken in order to achieve such objectives. To this end, students are, first of all, introduced to the reasons why free markets may fail to lead to efficiency and to outcomes that are acceptable according to widely shared conceptions of equity. Subsequently, they will learn the properties of a rational model of economic policy and will become acquainted with the various policy measures that in each case may correct market failures. Such measures will be distinguished according to their micro or macroeconomic nature and to their applicability to a closed or an open economy. Finally, students will also learn the reasons that explain why policy intervention itself may fail distinguishing between the case of badly designed policies and opportunism on the part of either policy makers or bureaucrats. Acquired knowledge Students passing the Economic Policy exam know which role the State should play in modern economic systems; the goals it should pursue under every circumstance and the measure it should take in order to achieve its goals in a consistent way and in the more efficient way. Moreover, successful students know the role that both in Italy and in the more advanced countries the State has actually played, its successes and the open problems it now faces. They also learn how globalization impacta upon national economic policies and the advantages and diffficulties of an international coordination of national policies. This acquired knowledge is necessary both to those who wish to continue studying economics and those who wish to enter the labour market after the Laurea. Acquired skills Students passing the exam are able to identify the main features of a public policy which should be effective and efficient; they can understand the main ongoing debates on the role that the State should play, in particular with reference to fiscal policy; the can also understand the decisions taken both by national and international bodies and predict their likely effects on several economic variables; they can read and largely understand several reports by national and international bodies, like the Bank of Italy, the Ministry of Economy, IMF, Oecd, etc. Finally they may read not too difficult scientific papers. | |||||
1006627 | FINANCIAL SCIENCE | 1st | 9 | SECS-P/03 | ITA | |
Educational objectives This course is designed to help students to achieve a solid grasp of the theory of public finance by applying the basic tools of microeconomics. The course trains students in areas relevant to the needs of business and government's institutions and provides the necessary background for advanced graduate studies. | |||||
1015450 | BASIC STATISTICS | 1st | 9 | SECS-S/01 | ITA | |
Educational objectives Provide students with a basic knowledge of descriptive and inferential Statistics. Students must be able to choose the right tools for basic statistical analysis and their main properties. Students must also be able to apply statistical instruments in different situations and explain correctly the achieved results. | |||||
1018176 | ENVIRONMENTAL ECONOMICS | 2nd | 9 | SECS-P/06 | ITA | |
Educational objectives The module aims at introducing the knowledge on the economic dimension of the problems related to the management of the environment and natural resources. Students will increase and improve their knowledge about the scientific basis for the economic analysis of the impact of human action on the environment. | |||||
10592602 | ECONOMY OF INNOVATION | 2nd | 6 | SECS-P/02 | ITA | |
Educational objectives General goals. The course aims to provide the basic concepts of the Economics of Innovation building on two major theoretical strands--evolutionary and neoclassical--and integrating the illustration of models with the discussion of empirical evidence concerning the determinants, diffusion and impact of technological change, at the micro and macro level. Finally, the theoretical concepts and empirical tools provided to students will be used as the basis for a discussion of the key principles of industrial and innovation policies. The first part of the course will focus on theories studying the relationship between science, technology and innovation. In what follows, some of the fundamental microeconomic models describing nature and behavior of the innovative firm are illustrated accounting for R&D, product, process and organizational innovation. Second, the course will focus on theoretical models analyzing the relationship between technological change and market structure. Third, theories that focus on ‘appropriability’ (patents) and diffusion processes will be explained. Concerning each theoretical domain, the lectures will refer to the different strands of literature emphasizing peculiarities, similarities and differences. The second part of the course will focus on the relationship between technological change and economic growth as well as on the effects of innovation on employment. As for the first part, the main exogenous and endogenous growth models will be illustrated highlighting the different ways in which the role of technological innovation is modeled. The relationship between innovation and growth will be discussed with reference to evolutionary models emphasizing the role of history and institutions in explaining the diffusion of innovation and its impact on economic growth. The relationship between innovation and employment will be illustrated building on evolutionary models that account for the heterogeneity of innovation processes, the role of compensatory mechanisms and that of institutions. The course will conclude with a discussion of the key principles of industrial and innovation policies stimulating students to use the theoretical tools acquired during the course to reflect on the nature and potential effectiveness of different policies. Specific goals. More specifically, the course aims to provide the student with: | |||||
1017104 | BUSINESS AND MANAGEMENT | 2nd | 9 | SECS-P/08 | ITA | |
Educational objectives The course means to treat the firm in the systemic perspective, with a particular reference to the government aspects and value creation, planning of the structure and risk management in its financial dynamics. The study programme is going to foresee also a close examination about the specificity of the Italian firm and its governance. | |||||
THREE-DIMENSIONAL MODELING |
3rd year
Lesson | Semester | CFU | SSD | Language | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
10606559 | ENERGY ECONOMICS | 1st | 6 | SECS-P/06 | ITA | |
Educational objectives The course provides the basic notions needed to understand the economic implications of energy choices: for example, the income generated by oil and gas, price instability, and the challenges associated with the reduction of fossil fuels consumption. Then, energy policies and the related tools for implementing them will be explored. Examples are environmental taxes and antitrust policies. The course will give special attention, on the one side, to the liberalization of network services (electricity and gas) and the related regulation, stressing the differences from the previous regulation under monopoly setting. On the other side, the link between the security of energy supplies and the prevention of climate change will be studied with highlightening the policies aimed at meeting the to goals. | |||||
1017137 | Economic geography | 1st | 9 | M-GGR/02 | ITA | |
Educational objectives Knowledge The students should able to know and understand the process that contribute to the present configuration of social, economic, and territorial relations of several world countries. Skills The students should able to know the territorial configuration of main economic sector, which there are important process of integration between countries and world regions, and at the same time, considerable differentiation of economic development. Other skills gained are about urban complexity, environmental question, regional planning and knowledge on main aspects of geoeconomic cartography. | |||||
Elective course | 1st | 6 | N/D | ITA | |
Elective course | 1st | 6 | N/D | ITA | |
1001651 | ADMINISTRATIVE LAW | 2nd | 9 | IUS/10 | ITA | |
Educational objectives General objectives The course aims to provide, through the analysis of the main general concepts, the basic knowledge which allows student to deal with the sources of administrative law and to understand the main features of administrative institutions and their functions, with particular regard to the relationship between citizens and public bodies. First part: Administrative law: history and development. The sources of administrative law. Administrative power: nature and principles. Public functions. The relationship between individuals and public administrations. Second part: Administrative action and administrative decisions. Elements, types, invalidity. Administrative procedure; public property; accountability and administrative justice. Specific Objectives The course aims at allowing students to acquire the knowledge of the main institutional aspects of the subject, with particular regard to the evolving dynamics of the relationship between the citizen and public bodies. This will allow students to deal with the main contemporary issues in administrative law and to follow the current doctrinal debate on them. | |||||
10606561 | ECONOMICS OF SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT | 2nd | 6 | SECS-P/06 | ITA | |
Educational objectives The course aims at offering students an understanding of the main challenges and pathways for sustainable development, i.e. economic development that is also socially inclusive and environmentally sustainable. The course allows the students to learn about the latest development program that the international community has agreed to implement by 2030. The module introduces a set of theoretical and practical issues on natural resource management, sustainability, globalization and environmental management. | |||||
1038371 | SUSTAINABLE MANAGEMENT OF RESOURCES | 2nd | 9 | SECS-P/13 | ITA | |
Educational objectives The course aims to provide the basic knowledge of human-environment relationships, natural resources and their management from a technological, economic and environmental point of view, in order to allow students to understand the importance of resources protection for a sustainable development of the different production fields. At the end of the course, the students must demonstrate to have understood the relationship between natural resources and productive activities development and must be able to assess the importance and the effects of the policies implemented in the sustainable management of resources in the short and long term. The acquired skills concern the environmental system, quality and food safety, water resource management, waste management and energy resources. | |||||
AAF1001 | FINAL EXAM | 2nd | 3 | N/D | ITA | |
Educational objectives the final exam consists of the presentation of an essay related to the activities conducted during the stage/Thesis-Work. | |||||
THREE-DIMENSIONAL MODELING |
Optional groups
Lesson | Year | Semester | CFU | SSD | Language |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1017178 | ADVANCED STATISTICAL METHODS | 2nd | 2nd | 9 | SECS-S/01 | ITA |
Educational objectives Students will be able to use theoretical and practical tools to model real phenomena. They will use the R statistical package to analyze real data. Students will be able to build a statistical model and to make inference | |||||
98457 | ECONOMIC STATISTICS | 2nd | 2nd | 9 | SECS-S/03 | ITA |
Educational objectives The course aims to provide students with a set of core competencies concerning measurement and statistical analysis of economic phenomena, with particular reference to the macro level. |
Lesson | Year | Semester | CFU | SSD | Language |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
10606560 | LAW OF ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE | 3rd | 1st | 6 | IUS/10 | ITA |
Educational objectives General objectives. The course aims to provide students with the basic concepts of artificial intelligence as a phenomenon that requires solid and careful legal regulation. During the lessons, the explanation of the phenomenon will be accompanied by the exposure of the relevant legislation, subject to constant updating by the national and supranational legislative body, to acquire a general vision and a concrete approach to the matter. In the first phase of the course, the phenomenon of AI will be analyzed: notions of a technical nature will be offered aimed at a better understanding of the concept and the identification of related concepts, such as neural networks, machine learning and deep learning. Having said this, we will investigate the main fields of application of A.I., with respect to which the advantages and risks deriving from the use of A.I. systems will be highlighted. In the second part of the course, however, you will have the opportunity to deepen the national and European legislation on the subject by covering, specifically, the legislative evolution of the A.I. and highlighting the role of ethics in its formation, necessary in order to better protect the balance between the economic interests of a market in the wake of technological development, on the one hand, and the protection of fundamental human rights, on the one hand other. In particular, the evolution of standardization tools will be observed, moving from soft law (as a more flexible tool and therefore adequate to the dynamism of the phenomenon) up to the adoption of hard law tools. Specific goals. | |||||
1013874 | LABOUR ECONOMICS | 3rd | 1st | 6 | SECS-P/02 | ITA |
Educational objectives General objectives. In summary, the general objective is to show the role of market mechanisms and the main institutions typical of the labour market in determining the variables of primary interest for social welfare, in terms of both efficiency and equity. Firstly, the course provides knowledge of the basic theoretical models for understanding the functioning of the labour market and its institutions, and the main determinants of employment, wages and unemployment. The theory presented covers first the demand, supply and equilibrium models under conditions of perfect competition, but also includes the main deviations from this model both in theory and with reference to observable reality. From the point of view of theory, the course is mainly at the microeconomic level but it also emphasises the connections with macroeconomic equilibrium, in particular with reference to unemployment. Furthermore, the course provides an introduction to the basic concepts and indicators necessary for the description and empirical analysis of the phenomena concerning labour in advanced economies, and the main stylised facts (as for employment, unemployment, wages in aggregate and their main differentiation by territorial area, gender, age, education), with reference to the Italian reality and that of the main countries comparable to it, at present and its evolution in the recent past. Insofar as the main variables concerning labour are the subject of economic policy choices by governments, the course aims to enable students to develop a broad vision and a critical capacity to compare the various theoretical models with each other and these models with the real issues. With regard to the specific contents of the course, after introducing labour supply and demand and the competitive equilibrium, as well as its properties of efficiency and equity, some policies such as the minimum wage and payroll taxes are considered, whose redistributive effects and those on employment and unemployment levels are considered. Furthermore, the theory of discrimination and some tools for its empirical analysis are introduced. On the labour supply side, the course includes the theory of human capital, which describes the motivations behind individual educational choices and predicts their consequences in terms of wages. Workplace training of workers is also considered. In addition, the theory of international migration is presented with a focus on its effects in the labour markets of the receiving countries. The course then goes on to present the main deviations from the perfectly competitive labour market. First, the case of the presence of trade unions and collective bargaining and the analysis of their consequences in terms of wages and employment. Secondly, the case of market power on the corporate side, with the so-called monopsony model. Finally, some relevant macroeconomic models, the concept of steady-state unemployment equilibrium and the Beveridge curve will also be presented with particular reference to the unemployment issue. In the course, exercises are planned to apply the main models with quantitative examples and exercises. In addition, a number of concrete cases relating to issues of particular relevance in Italy or other comparable countries will be presented, showing the data describing the phenomenon, its evolution over time and discussing the policies proposed or applied in view of the objectives set. Specific objectives. More specifically, the course aims to provide the student with: | |||||
1017101 | Economics of development | 3rd | 1st | 6 | SECS-P/01 | ITA |
Educational objectives The aim of the course is to introduce the students with a basic knowledge of economics to the analysis of development processes. The course intends to provides the students with the theoretical and analytical tools to explore the development and underdevelopment processes. A major aim is also the development of a historical and economic perspective to the analysis of development and underdevelopment. | |||||
1017122 | INTERNATIONAL ECONOMY | 3rd | 1st | 6 | SECS-P/01 | ITA |
Educational objectives General goals The aim of the course is to illustrate the basic concepts of International Economics. In the frontal lessons, the exposition of theoretical issues is integrated with the description of the main features of contemporary economies in a globalized world. The first part of the course analyzes the theory of international trade (mainly based on microeconomic tools), which studies the causes, the structure, and the volume of international trade (that is: which goods are imported and exported by countries, why and their volumes), the gains from international trade and their distribution across countries, the determination of relative prices in open economies, the effects of tariff barriers and quotas, the effects of international trade on international specialization of production and consumption in each country. The second part examines the theory of intentional financial relations (mainly based on macroeconomic tools), which studies the balance of payment problems in a monetary open economy (and, in particular, the automatic mechanisms and the economic policy interventions for the balance of payment equilibrium), the exchange rate regimes, the exchange rate determination, the monetary unions, the international liquidity problems, and related issues of the international monetary system (exchange rate crises, external debt crises, sovereign debt crises, speculative attacks in the international markets). Specific goals More in detail, the course aims at providing the student with: | |||||
10611992 | ENGLISH FOR ECONOMICS AND FINANCE | 3rd | 1st | 6 | L-LIN/12 | ENG |
Educational objectives KNOWLEDGE: The course aims to develop and enhance both general (General English) and specialised (English for Economics and Finance) communication skills that enable students to communicate effectively in English to meet the specific needs of their professional field. Through the enhancement of the prerequisites and the gradual improvement and consolidation of general language skills, students will be gradually introduced to specialised texts and domains related to the fields of economics and finance. The in-depth study of the specialised discourse will be mainly carried out through reading, analysis and comprehension of authentic specialised texts. The course will focus on the following topics: - Revision and in-depth analysis of the main morphosyntactic structures included in the B2 and B2+ levels of the Common European Framework of Reference for Languages (CEFR); Through lectures and class exercises in English, the course provides students with a balanced knowledge of oral and written comprehension. SKILLS: At the end of the course, students will be able to listen, speak, read and write fluently and accurately on various topics related to the financial and economic discourse. |
1st year
Lesson | Semester | CFU | SSD | Language |
---|---|---|---|---|
10616660 | Business Administration | 1st | 9 | SECS-P/07 | ENG |
1051807 | MICROECONOMICS | 1st | 9 | SECS-P/01 | ENG |
10616661 | CALCULUS AND LINEAR ALGEBRA | 1st | 9 | SECS-S/06 | ENG |
10616665 | Financial Reporting | 2nd | 9 | SECS-P/07 | ENG |
10606497 | MACROECONOMICS | 2nd | 9 | SECS-P/01 | ENG |
10616747 | Introduction to Private Law | 2nd | 6 | IUS/01 | ENG |
AAF2452 | Data Analysis for Economics and Business | 2nd | 3 | N/D | ENG |
2nd year
Lesson | Semester | CFU | SSD | Language |
---|---|---|---|---|
10600042 | ECONOMIC POLICY | 1st | 9 | SECS-P/02 | ENG |
10616666 | Statistics and Probability | 1st | 9 | SECS-S/01 | ENG |
10616690 | Financial Markets and Institutions | 1st | 6 | SECS-P/11 | ENG |
1051809 | ECONOMIC HISTORY | 1st | 9 | SECS-P/12 | ENG |
10616667 | Financial Mathematics | 2nd | 9 | SECS-S/06 | ENG |
10616720 | Statistical Inference | 2nd | 9 | SECS-S/01 | ENG |
10591675 | Public Economics | 2nd | 9 | SECS-P/03 | ENG |
AAF2453 | Computer Tools for Economic and Business Analysis | 2nd | 3 | N/D | ENG |
3rd year
Lesson | Semester | CFU | SSD | Language | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Elective course | 1st | 6 | N/D | ENG | |
Elective course | 1st | 6 | N/D | ENG | |
10592892 | ECONOMETRICS | 2nd | 9 | SECS-P/05 | ENG | |
10616726 | International Trade and Finance | 2nd | 9 | SECS-P/01 | ENG | |
1052124 | INTERNATIONAL LAW | 2nd | 9 | IUS/13 | ENG | |
AAF2454 | Sustainability Lab | 2nd | 3 | N/D | ENG | |
AAF1001 | FINAL EXAM | 2nd | 3 | N/D | ENG | |
Educational objectives the final exam consists of the presentation of an essay related to the activities conducted during the stage/Thesis-Work. | |||||
Economics |
Optional groups
Lesson | Year | Semester | CFU | SSD | Language |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
10616721 | Intermediate Microeconomics | 3rd | 1st | 6 | SECS-P/01 | ENG |
10616722 | Monetary and Financial Policy | 3rd | 1st | 6 | SECS-P/02 | ENG |
10606562 | GEOGRAFIA ECONOMICA | 3rd | 1st | 6 | M-GGR/02 | ENG |
10616723 | Labour Economics | 3rd | 1st | 6 | SECS-P/02 | ENG |
10616724 | Intermediate Macroeconomics | 3rd | 1st | 6 | SECS-P/01 | ENG |
10616725 | Intermediate Public Economics | 3rd | 1st | 6 | SECS-P/03 | ENG |
10616677 | Banking and Finance | 3rd | 1st | 6 | SECS-P/11 | ENG |