Chevron Left
Back to Economic Growth and Distributive Justice Part I - The Role of the State

Learner Reviews & Feedback for Economic Growth and Distributive Justice Part I - The Role of the State by Tel Aviv University

4.7
stars
379 ratings

About the Course

If you really care about the big questions in the economies and societies of the 21st century, such as distributive justice - namely, inequality of income or wealth, and its correlation with economic growth - this course is meant for you. The knowledge you will gain can truly change your outlook on our world. "Economic Growth and Distributive Justice - the Role of the State" is the first part of a two part course and it includes the following four lectures: (1) What do we need a state for? (2) The Relationship between Efficiency and Distributive Justice (3) Demonstrating the implications of different ethical theories (4) Distributive Justice: measurement and implications Once you've completed the first part, we strongly recommend that you register for the second part entitled: "Economic Growth and Distributive Justice - Maximizing Social Well-being", as well. Taking both parts of the course would enable you to obtain a fuller and more comprehensive knowledge about Economic Growth and Distributed Justice. The course is founded upon the elemental idea that the role of the state is to maximize the well-being - or simply the happiness - of its residents. In 9 fascinating, edifying lessons, using only simple words and decoding professional terminologies that sometimes baffle the intelligent layman, the course expounds many truths – both intuitive and unintuitive. Often using examples from the US and Europe, it does not however focus on policies in any particular region of the world, and is directly applicable to all countries around the globe. The course touches upon the essence of important concepts like efficiency and equity, inequality and poverty, gross domestic product, tax evasion and tax planning; it presents the work of Nobel Laureate James Mirrlees and his followers - promoting a coherent system that integrates tax and government expenditures to maximize social welfare; and illuminates a range of high-profile issues from their economic angle: • Climate change: the atmosphere and oceans as public goods, and how smart (Pigovian) taxation can be used to combat the rapidly increasing threats to our planet; • Technology as the engine of economic growth; • Taxing the rich: How can we mitigate the growing inequality problem? Should we impose a global tax on capital? The curriculum includes interviews with major figures in the fields of law and of economics: Harvard's Elhanan Helpman, Dan Shaviro from NYU and Richard Epstein from the University of Chicago and NYU. After successfully completing this course, you can expect to be able to: • Better understand economic issues presented in the media • Form an informed opinion on the strengths and weaknesses of presented social economic policies • Define and measure inequality and poverty • Define the connection between inequality (income, wealth) and economic growth • Explain the foundations of economic growth • Design a tax and transfer system to maximize the happiness of individuals All these will allow you to better understand the policies being developed around you, and to play a larger, more informed role in their development, as a conscientious citizen. In order to receive academic credit for this course you must successfully pass the academic exam on campus. For information on how to register for the academic exam – https://tauonline.tau.ac.il/registration Additionally, you can apply to certain degrees using the grades you received on the courses. Read more on this here – https://go.tau.ac.il/b.a/mooc-acceptance Teachers interested in teaching this course in their class rooms are invited to explore our Academic High school program here – https://tauonline.tau.ac.il/online-highschool Please note that there is a second part to this course which is a direct extension of this part. We highly recommend to continue to the second part after you finish this one (https://www.coursera.org/learn/economic-growth-part-2/home/welcome). This course will temporarily close for enrollment from March 1st, 2022 to August 31st, 2022. During this time, the course will be closed for new enrolments. All of the course materials will continue to be able available to previously enrolled learners; however, the course staff will not provide support in the Discussion Forums during this period. Best, The Tel Aviv University Team...

Top reviews

K

Mar 12, 2018

EXCELLENTLY DESIGNED COURSE WHICH GIVES ONE NECESSARY BASIC INSIGHTS IN UNDERSTANDING THE ROLE OF THE STATE AND HOW IT CAN ACHIEVE DISTRIBUTIVE JUSTICE BASED ON DIFFERENT PHILOSOPHIES.

S

Oct 24, 2022

Excellent course with principles explained using real life example. It gave a completely new perspective to look and analyse various public policies formulated by the State.

Filter by:

51 - 75 of 76 Reviews for Economic Growth and Distributive Justice Part I - The Role of the State

By nikhil p

•

Nov 29, 2017

Awesome :)

By Elisa T

•

Mar 25, 2022

Excelente

By Tejasvi N

•

Apr 29, 2020

Excellent

By Wiryanta M

•

May 13, 2020

Best one

By Mehmet y G

•

Oct 3, 2020

super

By Marana Z

•

Nov 30, 2020

good

By GLORIYA V

•

Jul 26, 2020

Good

By Sandhya j

•

Jul 20, 2020

good

By Mona A A

•

Jul 18, 2020

good

By Ibrahim N

•

Jun 15, 2017

The lecturer and the theme of the course are really very interesting and attractive. I am very glad that I completed this kind of course which is very rare among the economics courses. However, in my opinion, there were some little issues related to the course structure.

By Oriana N

•

Nov 24, 2019

Great course, excellent teacher, quite entertaining however I found that the test questions are not formulated in a way to improve knowledge but in a way to trick you.

By Pavel L

•

Jan 22, 2018

The course was a good one, but sometimes the professor used examples that weren't really clear and not easily applicable to reality.

By Dominic B

•

Aug 12, 2020

very good

sometimes tricky to understand as no sort of key bullet points to follow with sometimes but mostly excellent

By Xu J

•

Mar 1, 2020

Good course! And I am quite looking forward to more methods to achieve distribute justice in addition to taxation.

By Amin M a K a A M G

•

Mar 23, 2022

The cI learned quite a bit from the course and that was due to the Professor keeping us engaged in the course.

By Kim B

•

Jun 9, 2020

Very interesting content, I especially liked the discussions on the Distributive Justice Theories

By Alfy M S

•

Apr 26, 2020

it is very helpful and beneficial .and also helps us to understand aspects of economics better

By Abhijeet S

•

Jul 30, 2020

It is a well planned and easy course for comprehensive learning of the topic.

By Ana M H C

•

Aug 30, 2020

It was a good course, the theory was interesting

By Joy S

•

Jun 7, 2017

Rather good information. Easily understood.

By Mahitha S L

•

Sep 17, 2017

One of the best courses

By Edward V C

•

Apr 10, 2016

Great, thanks

By Enrique O

•

May 21, 2017

Algunos ejemplos de aplicación podrían mejorarse, ya que los expuestos no son muy usuales.

By Gabriel A P

•

Oct 7, 2017

It can be better

By Ashwary S

•

Jul 26, 2020

Coverage of the course is not satisfactory. The professor fails to explain the concepts introduced and very often projects theories and objective truths.