IX. Graduate Programs
Food, Agricultural and Resource Economics
MSc Program
The MSc program in Food, Agricultural and Resource Economics focuses on two major areas of emphasis:
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Food and agricultural economics
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Natural resource and environmental economics
The aim of the MSc program is to develop in students a fundamental understanding of economic principles and their application in identifying and solving relevant problems related to food, agriculture, and natural resources. The program also strives to develop appropriate analytical, methodological, and communication skills to enable students to analyze agriculture and resource problems effectively and explain their findings.
Admission Requirements
All students entering the Master of Science program must have achieved the University required minimum 70% (B-) average or equivalent. In addition, they are expected to have already taken, the following basic courses:
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Intermediate level micro- and macro-economic theory (ECON*2310 and ECON*2410 or equivalent)
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Calculus and matrix algebra with applications to economics (ECON*2770 or equivalent)
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Intermediate level statistics (ECON*3740 or equivalent).
The Departmental Graduate Program Committee examines each application before the student is proposed to the School of Graduate Studies for admission into the program.
Degree Requirements
MSc students are required to complete successfully six taught courses plus a seminar course. The minimum course work requirements (assuming all undergraduate background requirements have been met) are:
FARE*6380 | [0.50] | Applied Microeconomics for Agricultural Economists |
FARE*6910 | [0.50] | Applied Policy Analysis I |
FARE*6970 | [0.50] | Applied Quantitative Methods for Agricultural Economists |
FARE*6100 | [0.50] | The Methodologies of Economics |
Two graduate courses in Food, Agricultural or Resource Economics as approved by the student's advisory committee | ||
FARE*6800 | [0.00] | Seminar in Agricultural Economics |