Planning 267

Development Finance

Syllabus (in .pdf format)
Course Description
Required Reading
Pre-requisites & registration

 



Professor: Emil Malizia
Offered: Fall 1999
Time: MW 9:30-10:45
Room: New East 301
Course Description

Community developers, economic developers, and urban planners work to improve economically declining and physically deteriorating neighborhoods and downtown areas. Development finance is one tool for improvement. Community economic development practitioners function as development bankers and participants in public-private revitalization and redevelopment projects.


This course focuses on development banking as an integral part of the community and economic development process and on public-private projects that meet public interest objectives. Since housing is emphasized in other courses, the public-private projects considered are business development projects and commercial real estate projects. This course has the following learning objectives:

  • Learn how to analyze existing businesses or real estate projects, evaluate
    business plans or real estate pro formas, and determine the financial
    viability of a public-private project (ratio analysis, DCF analysis, credit
    analysis).
  • Learn how to structure and finance these projects, especially how to
    leverage other private and public sources.
  • Develop a definition of development banking and learn how development
    banking can promote community economic development.

Required Reading and Resources

Texts for the course are supplemented with a set of required and optional readings from other books and journals. The following text was required for Fall 1999:

Anthony, Essentials of Accounting (6th ed.) (1997).  Addison Wesley.

Pre-Requisites and Registration

There are no pre-requisites. Permission of the instructor is required to enroll.


Updated: February 11, 2000