For more details on the courses, please refer to the Course Catalog
Code | Course Title | Credit | Learning Time | Division | Degree | Grade | Note | Language | Availability |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
ECO3018 | International Trade Negotiations | 3 | 6 | Major | Bachelor | 3-4 | Economics | Korean,English | Yes |
Studies on the existing international trade order, code, rules, and practices agreed upon under the system of the World Trade Organization, and on the new world trade issues in terms of establishment of agenda, organization and procedures of negotiations, and final agreements. Also, the past Korean international trade policies and commercial negotiation techniques will be evaluated, and new approaches to them will be discussed. | |||||||||
ECO3021 | Foreign Exchange Market | 3 | 6 | Major | Bachelor | 3-4 | Economics | - | No |
Introduction to Foreign Exchange markets, terminalogy, and theories : What are currency markets about? Interaction between the money and Foreign exchange markets, Foreign money markets and Eurodollar markets:interest rates and Foreignexchange rates ; spread between domestic and Euro-notes ; spot notes and ForwardExchange rates and quotations ; SWAP transactions and covered interest ArbitrageFactors affecting spot exchange rates;Foreign exchange risk and its management Korean foreign exchange market and international foreign exchange markets : Derivatives. | |||||||||
FRE3005 | Business French | 3 | 6 | Major | Bachelor | 3-4 | French Language and Literature | Korean | Yes |
This course provides an opportunity to acquire and to discuss, in French, background on contemporary French life and the economic systems which serve it. And this course also provide workshop opportunities to solve practical problems of commerce through business correspondence, oral interviews, etc., in French. Students will gain introductory knowledge about France and its economy, acquiring at the same time active and passive abilities in the practical uses of French for commercial, business and academic purposes. | |||||||||
GER2034 | German Translation and Writing | 3 | 6 | Major | Bachelor | 2-3 | German Language and Literature | German | Yes |
This course is designed to help students to engage with advanced grammar and develop key translation and writing skills. | |||||||||
GER3028 | German Business Culture | 3 | 6 | Major | Bachelor | German Language and Literature | German | Yes | |
This course is intended to enhance German language skills in business areas, speaking and writing skills in business German in particular. Students will learn German as required for professional life, writing applications for jobs, and letters for international trade and banking etc. | |||||||||
INT2002 | International Trade Negotiation | 3 | 6 | Major | Bachelor | 1-4 | - | No | |
Course Summary: This course aims to enhance the understanding of the basic international negotiation theory and the application capacity of the negotiation theory to the actual negotiation contexts such as the bilateral negotiation and the multilateral negotiation considering the characteristics of the negotiation agenda and the negotiation partners. | |||||||||
INT2003 | International Trade Policy and Tariff | 3 | 6 | Major | Bachelor | 2-3 | - | No | |
This course aims at understanding the main concepts and practices regarding international trade policy and tariff. Focusing on the rapidly changing nature of the international trade environments, it delves into various trade-related institutions, most notably the tariff laws. | |||||||||
INT2004 | History of World Economic Order | 3 | 6 | Major | Bachelor | 2-3 | Korean | Yes | |
This course intends to study the historical process of the formation and transformation of the world economic order. It explores from the global perspectives how individual nations have built the world economic order through interactions among them and what changes they have undergone over time. It also explores the process in which various regions of the globe have developed their economies and reached the present economic structure. Through this exploration, it encourages students to enhace their understanding of the temporal and spacial patterns of the state-oriented, regional, and global economic orders. | |||||||||
INT3001 | International Economic Organization Theory | 3 | 6 | Major | Bachelor | 1-4 | Korean | Yes | |
Course Summary: This course targets to provide comprehensive understanding of economic backgrounds of the international economic organizations such as WTO, IMF, and IBRD, i.e., so call Bretton Woods systems. Moreover, based on the basic understandings of the organizational structure of the WTO, this course aims to provide the strategic analysis of the ongoing trade issues in the context of WTO. | |||||||||
INT3002 | Global Market Strategy | 3 | 6 | Major | Bachelor | 3-4 | Korean | Yes | |
This course explores the corporate strategy to penetrate the global markets. It deals with both the advance and frontier markets. It also studies the strategies for regional economic cooperation bodies such as FTA. Overall, it intends to give students an enhanced understanding of the strategy development process depending on the economic, social, and cultural characteristics of individual markets. | |||||||||
INT3003 | Global Sustainable Management | 3 | 6 | Major | Bachelor | 3-4 | Korean | Yes | |
The aim of this course is to study the issues of corporate management ethics and the social responsibility. Though this study students are expected to understand the limitation of the profit-oriented conventional enterprises and to extend the horizon on corporate business purproses. | |||||||||
INT3004 | Study of Regional Trade | 3 | 6 | Major | Bachelor | 3-4 | Korean | Yes | |
This course explores the institutional, cultural, and economic policy differentials of individual regions on the globe. It traces the major features of the economic systems of China, EU, India, Middle East, Pacific Rim regions and studies region-specific trade methods and practices. By focusing on one or a limited number of regions, this study escalates students' knowledge on the regional economy concerned. | |||||||||
ISS3151 | Corporate Finance | 3 | 6 | Major | Bachelor | 1-4 | English | Yes | |
In an increasingly globalized world, firms increasingly deal with several stakeholders from all over the word. Combining local knowledge from different countries can create synergies that improve financial analysis and bring insights that make financial forecast less prone to errors. In this course we will look at companies from a financial perspective. The ultimate goal of corporations is to take on the best possible projects (e.g., a plant expansion) and finance them the best way possible (e.g., issuing debt or equity). The time and uncertainty of investment payoffs make these problems nontrivial and essential for long-term success. Corporate finance answers the following questions: (a) Valuation: How can we value and choose projects? What is the value of a company? (b) Capital Structure: Should corporations obtain financing? For which projects? How? The aim is to give you a framework to understand and answer these issues in theory and in practice. We will see how to apply discounted cash flows to value bonds, stocks and other risky projects; we will use estimate a firm's cost of capital and different corporate valuation methods. | |||||||||
ISS3157 | Behavioral Economics and the Economics of Altruism | 3 | 6 | Major | Bachelor | 1-4 | English | Yes | |
Behavioral economics is gaining widespread acceptance among contemporary economists. Motivated by models and evidence from Psychology, it considers the implications of relaxing key classical assumptions, in particular, to allow for limited willpower, bounded cognition, and other-regarding preferences. Students will get a rigorous but intuitive introduction to prominent behavioral models such as "prospect theory", "satisficing," "time-inconsistent preferences", and "fairness". We will compare these to traditional economic models, considering the evidence, particularly from lab and field experiments, while learning key principles of experimental design and analysis. | |||||||||
ISS3159 | Understanding International Finance, the Global Economy, and Exchange Rates | 3 | 6 | Major | Bachelor | 1-4 | English | Yes | |
Exchange rates, foreign currency and international finance are essence in the global economy. Government repays overseas debt, companies make contracts on exporting/importing goods with foreign ones and fund managers invest clients’ money in overseas assets. All these economic activities are ultimately related to foreign exchange risk. Therefore, we will face serious economic losses without understanding international finance. This motivates us to study international finance. This course assumes that attended students have no background in finance and starts by introducing students to the foundations of financial theory. Students then learn the foundations of international finance focusing on foreign exchange rates. This course further introduces more advanced topics such as international asset pricing and currency risk management which are being actively used in the real world. In addition, students acquire skills in data analysis using Excel with Visual Basic for Applications. This exercise is very useful for students not only to prepare for their group works in this class, but also to do empirical analysis in both academics and industry. |