ECON 1375 - WORLD MOTOR CAR INDUSTRY Minimum Credits: 3 Maximum Credits: 3 This course introduces students to the basic history of the motor car by investigating corporate structure and strategy, design, engineering, production, quality control, distribution, marketing, exports/imports and consumer demand. The course will also examine socio-economic spin-off issues, such as motor safety, pollution, highway/road construction and placement, automobile repair/maintenance, government regulation and the so-called ‘car culture’, such as suburbia, ‘drive-in’ services, shopping malls, motels and the like. The car and its manufacturers were also prominent subjects in political economy. The course will study how mechanization influenced warfare in the 20th century and how politicians have embraced the car. The course will concentrate upon the consumer durable good that frequently acted as the ‘engine of the economy’ and its profound socio-economic and political effects around the world. Academic Career: Undergraduate Course Component: Lecture Grade Component: Letter Grade
Click here for class schedule information.
Add to Portfolio(opens a new window)
|