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Economist Daniel Diaz Vidal loves economic theory but understands that things like the aggregate demand and aggregate supply models and the Solow growth model are kind of dry and mathematical. So he helps students think of the concepts through examples in film and video games.“The ultimate goal is for them to understand that it’s technology, it’s capital, it’s human capital — our talent as individuals and our training and our skills — natural resources and the tools we have; those are the important things for economic growth,” said Vidal. “I also get them to realize that games and movies use reality and economic models to make the virtual or the game environment more interesting.”Several of his students have made the connection in the online game Minecraft, where imagination is the only limit for building complex civilizations out of blocks. “I was like absolutely, that is exactly what the game is all about. The game is built upon human existence and human experience, obviously because they try to make the game interesting,” Vidal said.This two-week May Term, the UT assistant professor of economics is using films like Scarface and The Big Short, and the Netflix series, Ozark, to help students better understand economic theory and several subfields like economics of crime, economic history and game theory.“The class is constantly thinking. This is not a class in which you learn an incredible amount of economic concepts, but this is a class in which from minute one until you leave, you’re constantly thinking about economics, about theory and about society and how it's structured,” said Vidal, an avid film enthusiast who loves spaghetti westerns. “You’re thinking about the films, you’re questioning what is this guy trying to tell me and what agenda is the guy trying to push, which is also something we try to teach in college — critical thinking.”Colin Joseph ’19, an international business and finance major with minors in cybersecurity and criminology and criminal justice, was intrigued by the course in how film directors are able to portray complex economic theories in a manner that is easily understood by the audience watching the film.
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