School of Policy, Planning, and Development
University of Southern California
Urban and Regional
Economics (Lec
79014R)
Fall 2002
Course Description
Class |
Instructor |
Contact |
|
Tuesdays & Thursdays |
Eric J. HEIKKILA, Associate Professor |
|
|
10:00 – 11:50pm |
1-213-821-1037 (or x11037) |
This course is motivated by
and builds on over a decade of experience I have had teaching economics to both
graduate and undergraduate students of planning. It also reflects my own
background as one who is trained formally in economics and who works
professionally and academically in planning. The central purpose of the course
is to help train planners who are able to formulate credible answers to the
question, "How would an economist analyze this issue?", while
retaining a planning perspective.
The
wonderful thing about planning is its rich inclusionary approach to social issues.
Planners as a profession acknowledge the importance of architecture, community,
culture, economics, engineering, environmental sciences, geography, history,
politics, quantitative methods, sociology and many other perspectives on the
planning experience. Planning is broad. The
wonderful thing about economics, especially the neoclassical approach to
microeconomics, is its rigorous and axiomatic approach to a certain class of
problems using a well developed paradigm of applied optimization theory. Economics is disciplined. At its best,
planning draws on the discipline of economics and other specialized fields and
provides an integrating framework for these disparate perspectives. At its
worst, planning becomes an unsatisfactory mish‑mash resulting in a superficial
dabbling in fields that planning practitioners do not truly understand.
This places the instructor of economics courses for planning students in somewhat of a quandry. Should one concentrate on teaching the principles of economic reasoning or should one focus instead on its applications and hope that students will infer from those applications what the essential elements are? Or, should one try to combine both aspects in a single course, despite the limited exposure students will have either to first principles or to meaningful applications? I pursue the latter strategy in this course, and in the accompanying textbook. This is accomplished by infusing first principles of economic reasoning in an exposition of their application to a set of topics that is likely to be of direct interest to planners; including land use zoning, urban structure, housing, traffic congestion, public goods, regional economies, cost‑benefit analysis, entitlements and institutions.
By the end of the semester you should be able to reason in economic terms about planning-related issues. More specifically, you will be expected to be able to:
One text book has been ordered for purchase in the University Bookstore:
Eric J. Heikkila, 2000, Economics of Planning, CUPR Press, Center for Urban Policy Research, Rutgers University.
I
am also making an electronic version of the text available for registered
students through Blackboard (http://learn.usc.edu). Any additional required readings will be
made available to you in a course reader format.
The class meets twice a week in a basic lecture format. Generally I allocate two lectures for each
of the major topics to be addressed.
The course is tightly structured around the principal text. Because I am the author of that text (which
has been adapted in university classrooms around the country and abroad), you
will find that the lectures and readings reinforce each other nicely. In addition, I set aside time for each of
you to make one short in-class presentation during the semester. These presentations will provide a regular
means by which the economic concepts and principles from the lectures are applied
directly to contemporary planning issues.
Requirements:
Your
course grade will be calculated as follows:
|
1 |
Participation (attendance 5%; discussion 5%) |
10.0% |
|
2 |
Quiz (thinking tools) |
7.5% |
|
3 |
Assignments (five @ 6%) |
30.0% |
|
4 |
Midterm exams (two @ 12.5%) |
25.0% |
|
5 |
In-class presentation |
7.5% |
|
6 |
Final exam |
20.0% |
|
|
Total |
100% |
·
Thinking tools – Heikkila, chapter 1
·
Land use zoning – Heikkila, chapters 2
·
Housing – Heikkila, chapter 3
·
Urban structure – Heikkila, chapter 4
·
Public goods and public choice – Heikkila, chapter 5
·
Traffic congestion – Heikkila, chapter 6
·
Regional economies – McCann[1],
chapter 4
·
Cost-benefit analysis – Heikkila, chapter 8
You
are expected to read the assigned readings before each class[2],
and your in-class discussion should make it evident that you have done so.
Please
refer to the “Schedule of Topics” that I have prepared as a separate
attachment to this syllabus.