Professor Engers is great, and once you pass his test at the beginning of the course, the grade distribution is very generous. It is not easy by any means, but very worthwhile.
Grade Distribution
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Sections
1Lecture (1)
Treat this as a rigorous graduate-level math course rather than a standard economics elective. You must be highly comfortable with advanced calculus and probability, and expect to invest at least five to six hours weekly grinding through intense problem sets and complex proofs. The classroom environment is strictly enforced with zero tolerance for lateness, and lectures move quickly through abstract material that often requires collaborative studying to fully grasp. However, if you clear the ungraded initial diagnostic and dedicate the time, the grading curve is exceptionally generous and reliably places dedicated students in the A or B range, so only enroll if you have the quantitative background and genuinely love the subject matter.
12 Reviews
Easy class if you're good at logic and did well in microeconomics (econ 301?), but the lectures are kinda a pain sometimes because all we did was write out all the notes he put up on the overhead all class when he coulda just posted them on toolkit. He might eventually do that, but I dunno. The book's not too useful. I opened it maybe twice the whole semester. Some of the problem sets are hard (there are around 4-6 of them), but they prepare you really well for the tests.