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  1. La rivista Forbes, a novembre 2018, riporta un PIL del Wisconsin pari a 342 miliardi di dollari che confrontato ai 304 miliardi del 2015 conferma una continua crescita delleconomia dello stato. Un altro dato importante da considerare è l’amento del reddito medio per nucleo familiare che sale a $58.550 con una crescita del 2,8% rispetto al 2017.

  2. The UW-Madison Economics Department is a highly ranked program dedicated to excellence in research and teaching. The department is one of the largest departments in the College of Letters and Science with more than 40 faculty, 12 teaching lecturers, 1,600 undergraduate students, 230 Masters students and 140 PhD students in residence.

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  3. The Wisconsin Economics master’s program offers a terminal graduate degree that prepares students for high-level professional careers in government and industry or further study for the Ph.D. degree.

  4. Position title: Curt and Sue Culver Professor of Economics; Co-Director, Center for Research on the Wisconsin Economy (CROWE) Email: ruhl2 @wisc.edu Phone: 608-263-3877

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  5. Our vision is to educate every Wisconsin student in economic and free market concepts; understanding the underpinnings of the markets that shape our history, our society and our daily life. We do this by supporting K-12 educators with professional development, curriculum and statewide student competitions.

  6. The Master of Science in Financial Economics (MSFE) program launched in Fall 2021. The program emphasizes modern quantitative methods in financial economics and econometrics.

  7. Economics, B.S. A major in economics gives students a greater understanding of how people, businesses, and governments respond to their economic environments. Many of the issues that fill the newspapers—jobs, wages, taxes, the cost of living, inequality, pollution, poverty, and economic growth—are, in fundamental ways, economic issues.