The first two years of studies are aimed at providing general education which includes humanities, social sciences, applied and natural sciences, computing and foreign languages. The next three years are devoted entirely to such special subjects as: economics, economic theories, management, accounting, auditing, taxation and many others.
Teaching is done through lectures, seminars and practical classes. Our students work at the Computer Centre of the University to gain practical experience of operating computer programs. It is here where practical classes on economic informatics are conducted. Some computers are connected to the global network-Internet and they can get access to valuable information. The skills of running a computer, mastering programming languages, making up programs are important for an economist's work.
Some students continue their research at the post-graduate courses if they have displayed excellent abilities as research workers.
Every summer all the students have their practical training at different enterprises, firms and banks, refineries, chemical and petrochemical plants where they collect material for their term papers and graduation projects.
It is very important to study economics in order to become a skilled specialist. The study of this field will enable to serve customers better, improve the performance of the firm and grow professionally. Economics is not easy to master but if you persist and learn its concepts, you will become better informed, more enlightened and your deeper understanding of any economical system will position you for growth and success in your profession.
Studying economics helps students to improve their analytical skills, which are in great demand at the workplace. Also the study of economics helps them to make sense of the everyday activity.
Graduates of this Faculty will become multifunctional workers. After graduating from the University students will be able to find a job in any business: commercial and state banks, research institutes, joint - stock companies, city and district planning committees, large-scale and small businesses and other enterprises.
Our country needs highly skilled economists to work in various spheres of economics and management, and all the students should study hard to become such specialists.
(CNN) — As the poster child for overtourism, Venice has long been a city of mounting lines, uncomfortable crowding and mushrooming Airbnbs which are blamed for pricing locals out of the city.
The authorities have long been looking for a way to control things -- with UNESCO's recent threat to remove its World Heritage status hastening the urgency.
The proposed solution? To be the first city in the world to require an entry fee, with a booking system to be set up for daytrippers, and only those holding reservations allowed entry into the city. The plan was announced before the pandemic, and then put on ice, as the city was devastated by the dearth of tourists.
Now, the city's mayor has announced that visitors can make reservations from this summer, with an entrance fee due from January 2023.
After a suffocating Easter weekend -- which saw 120,000 tourists swamp the city of 50,000 residents on the Saturday, according to local police, with numbers rising to 158,000 on the Sunday, according to data from the Smart Control Room -- mayor Luigi Brugnaro announced that the reservations system was going ahead.
The booking system "is the right course to take, for a more balanced management of tourism," he tweeted.
"We will be the first in the world for this difficult experiment."
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Inside the Italian town that charges tourists an entry fee
The councillor responsible for tourism, Simone Venturini, told RAI, the state TV network, that within weeks, the city will launch a "very simple and quick" portal for online bookings.
"This summer it'll be possible to book a day trip, and in 2023 we'll start the contributo di accesso" -- or entry fee -- he said.
Venturini said that the pandemic had made the city authorities reflect.
"Covid made us realize that what was an everyday occurrence before covid isn't acceptable anymore -- the mentality has changed, as has the sensitivity [towards crowds]," he said.
The booking system will be on a voluntary basis for 2022, he announced -- adding that visitors will be offered "incentives" to use the portal, including queue-jumping status at various sites and museums. It'll be run as a trial, to implement the obligatory system in January 2023.
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