Econ 125 Final Essay
Final Essay Econ-125
Guidelines for Essay:
TECHNICAL REQUIREMENTS:
· 1-inch margins all around (we will measure, YOU must make sure that your uploading is printing correctly, this is not my or the grader’s responsibility, it is yours.)
· Please use Chicago Style for your references.
· Use a clear, readable, font such as Verdana, Calibri, Tahoma or Arial, etc. Please be consistent and use the same font throughout.
· Use black text on a white background. Avoid colored backgrounds or text in a color other than black unless you have special permission to use them (for example, if you're dyslexic).
· Use 12-point font for the body of your assignment.
· Use double spacing, only one-line space between paragraphs
· Left-justify your work (also known as left-aligned).
· Use bold for headings. Not underlining or italics.
· You must have a(n) Title, Introduction, Thesis Statement, Transitions, Topic Sentences, Body Paragraphs, Conclusion, and References Page(s).
· As well as a reference page, in-text references are required within the paper (footnoted). 5 references minimum. The reference page(s) DO NOT count towards your FULL lines of text.
· Graphs and Tables are required. These (Graphs and Tables) should each have their own page with a title (on the top of the page) and a description of no less than two complete sentences (below the table or graph). These pages DO NOT count towards your FULL lines of text, and should be located after the conclusion and before the references.
· All papers should include a header on the front page. This header DOES NOT count toward your FULL lines of text. It should include:
· Your name
· Student ID#
· The Course Number
· Minimum 5 pages, Maximum 8 pages
History is connected to all things:
We have woven together three strands of U.S. economic history in Economics 125: economic growth, development of infrastructure, and inequities in economic treatment. Sometimes these three strands came together in one tale.
-For example, the removal of Native Americans from the land, the financial and governmental institutions that enabled increases in land ownership, and the role of increased land and land productivity in contributing to economic growth. -
We have also discussed inequities in the context of slavery, discrimination, and distribution of income and wealth.
Economic historians — and hopefully now you, too — believe that studying history can provide new perspectives on recent economic patterns and on the potential for further economic growth and development in the 21st century. In this essay, you will: • First, set the stage. Present and explain the aggregate production function (Cobb-Douglas production function of the form , where Y is real GDP, K is the physical capital stock, L represents labor, H is human capital, and A represents technology and natural resources. We assume ) that can be used to discuss issues of growth in contemporary and historical contexts. Show the relationship between output per capita (Y/L) and its determining factors. Highlight the theoretical sources of growth. Discuss the role for development of infrastructure. • Next, illustrate the three strands of economic history (growth, infrastructure, inequities). Choose three examples — one illustrating growth, one illustrating development, one illustrating inequity — with one example from each of three time periods: pre-1860, 1860-1940, and 1940-2020 (giving a total of nine). For each example, describe the historical event/episode. How does it illustrate economic growth, development, or inequities in economic history? What happened? Why? How? What was the impact? The determinants? Provide any relevant economic analysis. The more specific and complete your examples, the more coherent your writing, and the more appropriate your examples to a discussion of American economic history, the better your grade. • Conclude your essay by pointing to the future. As we enter the 21st century, what is the potential for further economic growth? What are the likely sources of and impact of further infrastructure development? What is the potential for future inequities?