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The Most Comprehensive (70 Hrs! ) Economics Course (Diploma)

Posted By: ELK1nG
The Most Comprehensive (70 Hrs! ) Economics Course (Diploma)

The Most Comprehensive (70 Hrs! ) Economics Course (Diploma)
Last updated 7/2022
MP4 | Video: h264, 1280x720 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz
Language: English | Size: 76.14 GB | Duration: 69h 53m

Oxford Diploma in Economics: India, USA, Australia, S. Africa, Islam and Economics - a serious course for hard workers!

What you'll learn
This is the ONLY Udemy course to offer the Oxford Diploma for Economics
How you learn by joining in the 5000 discussions! (As at June 2022)
Davos and Globalisation
Focusing on individual countries (eg. USA, UK, Norway, Saudi Arabia, Bulgaria, India, Italy, South Africa)
Analysis of global topics including climate change, peak oil theory, economic growth, economics of veganism
25 workbooks including COVID-19 impact: learn through discussion also the Indian economy
Analysis of pro-Brexit economic arguments
Workbooks/lectures on: USA, India, UK, Australia
The economic legacy of Theresa May (UK Prime Minister who has just resigned)
The EU Elections
Economics and decluttering
The USA Economy as at April 2020/1
A seven day course in Business Economics English
Climate change and Economics
Understand the basics of micro and macro Economics
Trumponomics and Corbynomics
2021 Budget
Textbooks are included!
Requirements
An interest in understanding world affairs - especially the economics behind President Trump
An interest in current (economic) affairs - COVID-19 economic impact
A desire to read further - and apply
You will learn a lot more if you participate
A willingness to participate in the numerous discussions
A willingness to learn English (a course is included)
Description
THIS COURSE IS NOTHING TO DO WITH OXFORD UNIVERSITY.Important notice: This course is run as a HUGE class. There are 5500+ posts in the Q/A at an average of about 60 posts a day. Students from many different countries post and ask/answer questions on all aspects of Economics.  Recent discussions have been about:Islam and EconomicsMarginal UtilityElasticityBidenomicsSouth Africa and Economics2021 budget and budgets in generalClimate ChangeBrexitModern monetary theoryIndian economyUSA economyVocabulary tests galore to make sure you understandQ/A discussions - you post definitions and get asked questionsUkraine economyThis is a course where everyone learns from each other. 5500 posts means students are ENGAGED IN THE COURSE. NEW SECTION JUNE 2022DavosInterest ratesTyres and pollutionThe economic war in UkraineNEW SECTION JANUARY 2022The Great Reset - a hugely provocative section to encourage discussion. Current as at 17 January 2022.NEW SECTION JUNE 2021ConfidenceNEW SECTION MAY 2021The economic costs of strokes (health economics)NEW SECTIONS APRIL 2021:1. Brexit - the update2. Key Economic vocabularyTWO NEW ADDITIONS CURRENT AS AT DECEMBER 20201. Economics workbook on Italy2. Special new section on the stimulus package for South AfricaNote: This course includes the Oxford Diploma – no other Udemy Economics course (by other Instructors) satisfies the criteria. If you achieve the Diploma then you will have worked very hard and learned a lot. There is a detailed video on the Oxford Diploma plus a checklist plus a 'Diploma Requirements' documentBEFORE YOU ENROL:1. Watch the Preview video2. Watch the sample lectures3. Thoroughly read this course description4. Be fully aware that participation is encouraged - that means there are manuals (many!) numerous discussions (Q/A sections) and regular Education Announcements5. To achieve the Oxford Diploma requires quite a lot of work. To acquire the Completion Certificate you can just…watch. You can choose to do either, neither or…both. Questions are responded to quickly.6. Remember too that this course includes an OPTIONAL course in Business Economics English.Six reasons to TAKE THIS COURSE right now:1. You cannot lose - 30 day refund if you really really don't like the course BUT if you DO like it:a. updated lecturesb. case studies based on very very current news itemsc. detailed responses to messagesd. I constantly attempt to have a 'class atmosphere' e.g. throwing questions open to alle. regular Announcements that are not disguised sales ploysf. regular FREE access to numerous other courses offered by me2. I am a lecturer/teacher in Economics by trade i.e. I teach full-time for a living. I have been Principal, Director of Studies and Head of Economics. (Oxford, UK) I have lectured in University, adult evening classes and also run over 60 seminars in the UK, Poland and the Czech Republic.3. I am/have been an Examiner for FIVE different examination boards4. I have 100+ books on Amazon - many of them about Business/Economics5. The success of my students has been featured on the BBC, Daily Telegraph, The Times and I have been featured on TV in 2 countries (as well as the UK)MOTIVATIONI make courses on Udemy primarily because I enjoy the process of causing learning. Many of my courses are to improve lives. One of the Economics courses (Dogonomics) is to raise money for charity. (100% of revenue goes to the charity) Another course (Quakernomics) raises money for an animal sanctuary. Fundamentally this course is about helping you.What is the course about?This course is FOURTEEN Economics courses in ONE! Five more added in April 2020Business/Economics English course for those whose first language is not EnglishCovid 19 – its impactEgg timer economicsRevision and Current affairsProsperity and Justice UKOne step backwards – one giant leap forwardsTheresa May UK (Prime Minister)Boris and Brexit - the UK PM's pledges analysed 2 courses)Before…and afterThe Economy of the USAThe Nigerian EconomyApril fools economicsEnd of Course Homework: Multiple choice testsUkraineThe FOURTEEN courses take you through BEGINNER to ADVANCED!Course One - Business Economics EnglishThis is a seven day Business Economics English course for those students whose first language is not nEnglish. If you are fluent in English then skip this course.Course Two - Egg Timer Economics‘Egg timer economics’ is a series of very short lectures that illustrate key areas of the advanced Economics course. (Each lecture is about 3.5 minutes, hence the title 'Egg-timer Economics!) The course introduces key areas of micro and macroeconomics in a very straightforward way. There are also two sections on current affairs to encourage those attending the course to use news items to learn about Economics.Each lecture (except Current Affairs) is accompanied by data response questions and a quiz.Course Three - CorbynomicsCorbynomics.Jeremy Corbyn leads the Labour Party in the UK. 'Corbynomics' has certainly captured the attention of the young.BUT what IS 'Corbynomics'?This part examines the Labour Party's Economic policiesCourse Four- Revision LecturesRevision.There are three elements to this course:· current news items· rapid fire questions about the economics in the news· revision lecturesCourse Five - World EconomicsWe look at individual economies of the world - starting with the UKCourse SixBack to basics but also a giant leap forward - go and look!Topics include:· aggregate demand· aggregate supply· confidence and AD· economies of Australia, America, Sweden and the UK· impact of Brexit· international trade· government economic policy· savings/savings ratio· Twitter as an investment toolCourse Seven· The economic legacy of Theresa May, the UK Prime Minister who has just resigned (May 2019)· The European ElectionsCourse EightThe UK has a new Prime Minister. He has made a series of pledges about the economy.These are analysed.Courses Nine and TenA Before..and After course which measures your progress.Course Eleven The Economic impact of COVID-19 (and a workbook)Course TwelveThe Economy of the USACurrent as at April 2020 we look at the USA and COVID…and the impact. But we also look at whether Americans are happy with their economy.Course ThirteenThe Nigerian EconomyWe consider the macro areas of the Nigerian EconomyCourse FourteenApril Fools economicsCreated specifically for April 1st we look at Economic hoaxes.What terminology would you expect the audience to use to find your course?The terminology is common business language – as found in newspapers. Therefore terms such as ‘fiscal policy’ and ‘monetary policy’ are used. Students are encouraged to use the Q/A option to raise points and questions. These questions will very quickly be responded to. Remember too that there is an ‘Economics English’ course included.What kind of materials are included?600+ short lectures and some documents that a) test whether the student had understood/remembered the key elements of the lecture and b) questions encouraging to do their own research. In that way the course continues beyond the video.How long will the course take to complete?Assuming the student has 2 hours a day , the course could easily be covered in ten weeks. However, one of the purposes of the course is to enthuse the student and the questions asked may encourage the student to spend hours reading newspaper articles. There are also 24 workbooks that, if filled in, will easily take another 120 hours. (This is a very intensive course!)How is the course structured?The lectures follow the standard Advanced Economic syllabus. So, video, then an extension document. Then the next video. There are many, many revision questions.Why take this course?So many reasons!1. To quickly gain an understanding of micro and macro economics2. To be able to assess and evaluate America's economic policies3. To be able to assess and evaluate the UK's 'alternative' economic policies4. In the final extended section you can thoroughly test yourself and really see if you understand the economics behind current articles. These lectures are boosted by repeats of earlier lectures. Thus: R-E-V-I-S-I-O-N

Overview

Section 1: OPTIONAL: UKRAINE

Lecture 1 Introduction

Lecture 2 Relevance

Lecture 3 Truth

Lecture 4 Action

Lecture 5 The End

Lecture 6 P.P.S.

Section 2: Friendly advice

Lecture 7 Friendly advice

Section 3: Attention!

Lecture 8 Attention!

Section 4: Please watch this first!

Lecture 9 Introduction

Lecture 10 Please!! Please!! watch this!

Section 5: OPTIONAL : Maximising enjoyment

Lecture 11 Maximising your enjoyment from this course

Lecture 12 Maximising your enjoyment from this course (Part 2)

Lecture 13 Maximising your enjoyment from this course (Part 3)

Lecture 14 Maximising your enjoyment from this course (Part 4)

Lecture 15 Maximising your enjoyment from this course (Part 5)

Lecture 16 Preview repeat

Lecture 17 Introduction

Section 6: (Compulsory section) Oxford School of Learning Diploma

Lecture 18 About the Diploma

Section 7: OPTIONAL: Short Course: Business and Economics English

Lecture 19 Introduction

Lecture 20 Day One: Ask for Help

Lecture 21 Day Two: Watch and Listen

Lecture 22 Day Three: Write Down Words and Phrases

Lecture 23 Day Four: Practice as much as you can (Part 1)

Lecture 24 Day Four: Practice as much as you can (Part 2)

Lecture 25 Day Five: Make time to study

Lecture 26 Day Six: Five Websites

Lecture 27 Day Seven: In conclusion

Section 8: Let's CHAT about Economics

Lecture 28 Let's begin

Lecture 29 Punishers and the punished

Lecture 30 Whose idea was it to have sanctions?

Lecture 31 Interest rates

Lecture 32 Impact…on whom? - pt 1

Lecture 33 Impact on whom…? pt 2

Lecture 34 Impact …on whom?

Lecture 35 Davos and globalisation - pt 1

Lecture 36 Davos and globalisation - 2

Lecture 37 Davos and globalisation - 3

Lecture 38 Particle pollutants - 1

Lecture 39 Particle Pollutants - 2

Section 9: Let's chat some more…

Lecture 40 Introduction

Lecture 41 Labour shortages

Lecture 42 Chickpea shortage

Lecture 43 Fuel prices

Lecture 44 Doom, gloom …and sunset

Section 10: Compulsory for Oxford Diploma : Key Vocabulary

Lecture 45 Introduction

Lecture 46 Lecture 1 : The first five

Lecture 47 Lecture 2 : Keep plugging away

Lecture 48 Lecture 3: Five more of the best

Lecture 49 Lecture 4 : More and more Vocabulary

Lecture 50 Lecture 5 : Explore concepts!

Lecture 51 Lecture 6 : Well done so far

Lecture 52 Lecture 7 : 60+ Definitions so far?

Lecture 53 Lecture 8 : Nearly at the end of the beginning

Lecture 54 Lecture 9 : Almost there!

Lecture 55 Lecture 10 : The final lecture!

Section 11: Test

Lecture 56 Introduction

Lecture 57 Day 1

Lecture 58 Day 2

Lecture 59 Day 3

Lecture 60 Day 4

Lecture 61 Day 5

Lecture 62 Day 6

Lecture 63 Day 7

Lecture 64 Day 8

Lecture 65 Day 9

Lecture 66 Day 10

Lecture 67 Day 11

Lecture 68 Day 12

Lecture 69 Day 13

Lecture 70 Day 14

Lecture 71 Day 15

Lecture 72 Day 16

Lecture 73 Day 17

Lecture 74 Day 18

Lecture 75 Day 19

Lecture 76 Day 20

Lecture 77 Day 21

Lecture 78 Day 22

Lecture 79 Day 23

Lecture 80 Day 24

Lecture 81 Day 25

Lecture 82 Day 26

Section 12: Globalisation

Lecture 83 Introduction and Keynote Address

Lecture 84 Some causes of globalisation

Lecture 85 More on causes of globalisation

Lecture 86 Characteristics of globalisation - part 1

Lecture 87 Characteristics of globalisation - part 2

Lecture 88 Winners and Losers

Lecture 89 Winners and Losers - part 2

Lecture 90 How does globalisation affect the UK Economy?

Lecture 91 How does globalisation affect the UK Economy - part 2

Lecture 92 Let me level with you!

Lecture 93 Globalisation - the disadvantages

Lecture 94 Is globalisation irreversible?

Lecture 95 Discussion

Lecture 96 Multinationals and globalisation - part 1

Lecture 97 Multinationals and globalisation part 2

Section 13: The Great Reset - this is to stimulate discussion!

Lecture 98 Introduction - part 1

Lecture 99 Introduction - part 2

Lecture 100 Introduction - part 3

Lecture 101 Health - pt 1

Lecture 102 Health - pt 2

Lecture 103 Health - pt 3

Lecture 104 Wealth

Lecture 105 Ownership

Lecture 106 Ownership - 2

Lecture 107 Continuance

Lecture 108 Energy - pt 1

Lecture 109 Energy - pt 2

Lecture 110 Energy - pt 3

Lecture 111 Nutrition - pt 1

Lecture 112 Nutrition - pt 2

Lecture 113 Nutrition - pt 3

Lecture 114 Surveillance

Lecture 115 Individual sovereignty

Lecture 116 Market freedom

Lecture 117 P.P.S.

Section 14: OPTIONAL : Before….and After

Lecture 118 Introduction

Lecture 119 Lecture 1: Market Failure

Lecture 120 Lecture 2: General Election

Lecture 121 Lecture 3: The £ surges

Lecture 122 Lecture 4: Breakthrough Lifts Company Shares

Lecture 123 Lecture 5: Inflation unexpectedly holds steady

Lecture 124 Lecture 6: Exports slowdown bolsters trade

Lecture 125 Lecture 7: Private sector slides

Lecture 126 Lecture 8: Employment falls by largest margin

Lecture 127 Lecture 9: Public borrowing rises

Lecture 128 Lecture 10: House Price Growth

Lecture 129 Lecture 11: And another thing we've learned…

Lecture 130 Lecture 12: Retail sales fail to bounce…

Section 15: Compulsory: The Q/A

Lecture 131 Introduction

Lecture 132 Another benefit of the coronavirus

Lecture 133 Explore concepts

Lecture 134 Keep plugging away

Lecture 135 Five more of the best

Lecture 136 More and more vocabulary

Lecture 137 What factors affect the exchange rate

Lecture 138 Homework from slide

Lecture 139 The Great Reset

Lecture 140 Well done so far!

Lecture 141 Who should improve inequalities?

Lecture 142 Summary slide

Lecture 143 26 Day Thread

Section 16: Compulsory for Diploma : Covid-19 - it's impact

Lecture 144 Introduction

Lecture 145 Interest rate cuts?

Lecture 146 Interest rate cuts? (part 2)

Lecture 147 Expansionary fiscal policy

Lecture 148 The response from the USA

Lecture 149 LMICs and Primary Health Care Systems

Lecture 150 Actions by Individuals

Lecture 151 US benchmark interest rates

Lecture 152 Car sales

Lecture 153 Service contraction

Lecture 154 Lower Bond Yield

Lecture 155 Coal consumption/The Baltic Exchange

Lecture 156 Global shares

Lecture 157 Pollution - an upside

Lecture 158 Restaurant bookings

Lecture 159 Manufacturing activity

Lecture 160 Commodity prices

Lecture 161 Breathe…more easily

Lecture 162 A silver lining?

Lecture 163 Upward trajectory?

Lecture 164 How you can help yourself

Section 17: Compulsory for Diploma : Covid-19 and change

Lecture 165 Introduction

Lecture 166 Trade offs

Lecture 167 Trade offs (Part 2)

Lecture 168 Trade offs (Part 3)

Lecture 169 Post-COVID slump

Lecture 170 Post-COVID slump (Part 2)

Lecture 171 Post-COVID slump (Part 3)

Lecture 172 Post-COVID slump (Part 4)

Lecture 173 Post-COVID slump (Part 5)

Lecture 174 Recession

Lecture 175 Recession (Part 2)

Lecture 176 Recession (Part 3)

Lecture 177 Recession (Part 4)

Lecture 178 Recession (Part 5)

Lecture 179 Recession (Part 6)

Lecture 180 Recession (Part 7)

Lecture 181 Recession (Part 8)

Section 18: Compulsory for Diploma : Egg Timer Economics

Lecture 182 About the lecturer

Lecture 183 Reviews

Lecture 184 Lecture 1: Introduction

Lecture 185 Demand

Lecture 186 Lecture 3: Supply

Lecture 187 Elasticity

Lecture 188 Market failure

Lecture 189 Lecture 6: Current Affairs

Lecture 190 Lecture 7: Introduction to Macro-economics

Lecture 191 Aggregate Demand

Lecture 192 Lecture 9: Aggregate Supply

Lecture 193 Lecture 10: Aims and Objectives of Government economic policy

Lecture 194 Lecture 11: Government Economic policies

Lecture 195 Lecture 12: Current Affairs

Lecture 196 Lecture 13: Revision session

Lecture 197 Current Affairs 10th November 2020

Lecture 198 Part 2

Lecture 199 Part 3

Lecture 200 Part 4

Lecture 201 Part 5

Lecture 202 Part 6

Lecture 203 Part 7

Lecture 204 Part 8

Lecture 205 Current Affairs 11th November 2020

Lecture 206 Part 2

Lecture 207 Part 3

Lecture 208 Part 4

Lecture 209 Part 5

Lecture 210 Part 6

Lecture 211 Part 7

Lecture 212 Part 8

Lecture 213 Part 9

Section 19: Compulsory for Diploma : The 2020 Presidential Election - what do others think?

Lecture 214 Introduction

Lecture 215 Will the voters listen to 700 Economists? - Part 1

Lecture 216 Will the voters listen to 700 Economists? - Part 2

Lecture 217 Will the voters listen to 700 Economists? - Part 3

Lecture 218 Will the voters listen to 700 Economists? - Part 4

Lecture 219 Will the voters listen to 700 Economists? - Part 5

Lecture 220 Will the voters listen to 700 Economists? - Part 6

Lecture 221 Will the voters listen to 700 Economists? - Part 7

Lecture 222 A promise not to raise taxes? - Part 1

Lecture 223 A promise not to raise taxes? - Part 2

Lecture 224 The Biden plan…bit by bit…you comment - Part 1

Lecture 225 The Biden plan…bit by bit…you comment - Part 2

Lecture 226 The Biden plan…bit by bit…you comment - Part 3

Lecture 227 The Biden plan…bit by bit…you comment - Part 4

Lecture 228 The Biden plan…bit by bit…you comment - Part 5

Lecture 229 The Biden plan…bit by bit…you comment - Part 6

Lecture 230 The Biden plan…bit by bit…you comment - Part 7

Lecture 231 The Biden plan…bit by bit…you comment - Part 8

Lecture 232 'Stunning misunderstanding'?

Lecture 233 He said…

Section 20: Optional: Revision & current affairs

Lecture 234 Introduction

Lecture 235 Tariffs

Lecture 236 Free Trade

Lecture 237 Minimum wage / Government intervention

Lecture 238 Production

Lecture 239 Competitiveness / Elasticity of demand

Lecture 240 Tariffs

Lecture 241 Economic growth

Lecture 242 Trade wars

Lecture 243 Certainty

Lecture 244 Trumponomics

Lecture 245 Trumponomics

Lecture 246 Trumponomics

Lecture 247 Federal budget deficit and debt

Lecture 248 Employment / Trumponomics

Lecture 249 Wages and labour protection

Lecture 250 Trumponomics

Lecture 251 Supply

Lecture 252 Economic growth

Section 21: Optional: Prosperity and Justice: UK

Lecture 253 Introduction

Lecture 254 The economy today

Lecture 255 A new vision for the economy

Lecture 256 Reshaping the economy

Lecture 257 Partnership and power

Lecture 258 Time for change

Lecture 259 Reshaping the economy through industrial strategy

Lecture 260 Securing good jobs, good pay and good lives

Lecture 261 Turning business towards long term success

Lecture 262 Promoting open markets in the new economy

Lecture 263 Raising public investment in a reformed macroeconomic framework

Lecture 264 Strengthening the financial system

Lecture 265 Spreading wealth and ownership across the economy

Lecture 266 Designing simpler and fairer taxes

Lecture 267 Ensuring environmental sustainability

Lecture 268 Creating a new economic constitution

Lecture 269 Key messages

Section 22: Compulsory for Diploma : One step backwards - a giant leap forwards

Lecture 270 Introduction

Lecture 271 Section 6: Lecture 1

Lecture 272 Section 6: Lecture 2

Lecture 273 Section 6: Lecture 3

Lecture 274 Section 6: Lecture 4

Lecture 275 Section 6: Lecture 5

Lecture 276 Section 6: Lecture 6a

Lecture 277 Section 6: Lecture 6b

Lecture 278 Section 6: Lecture 7

Lecture 279 Section 6: Lecture 8

Lecture 280 Section 6: Lecture 9

Lecture 281 Section 6: Lecture 10

Section 23: Optional: Theresa May (UK Prime Minister) - her economic legacy

Lecture 282 Introduction

Lecture 283 Resignation speech - what she really meant

Lecture 284 Initial reactions from the City

Lecture 285 Green Legacy (part 1)

Lecture 286 Green Legacy (pt 2)

Lecture 287 Economic legacy

Lecture 288 European Union Part 1

Lecture 289 European Union Part 2

Lecture 290 Therexit: the economic fallout

Lecture 291 What next?

Lecture 292 Crowing?

Section 24: Optional : Boris Johnson, new Prime Minister UK: the pledges

Lecture 293 Introduction - pt 1

Lecture 294 Introduction - pt 2

Lecture 295 Boris's speech analysed - pt 1

Lecture 296 Boris's speech analysed - pt 2

Lecture 297 Income tax

Lecture 298 Increasing the starting point for National Insurance

Lecture 299 Raising Education Spending

Lecture 300 Employing more police officers

Lecture 301 Free TV Licenses

Lecture 302 Stamp Duty

Lecture 303 The Fourth Option

Lecture 304 Six Free Ports

Lecture 305 Full Fibre Broadband

Lecture 306 Raising the National Minimum Wage

Lecture 307 The NHS

Lecture 308 What's been inherited?

Lecture 309 Will the UK get £39bn?

Section 25: Compulsory for the Diploma : America - a World Economy

Lecture 310 Introduction

Lecture 311 Overview

Lecture 312 Coming to an end (part 1)

Lecture 313 Coming to an end (part 2)

Lecture 314 But on the other hand

Lecture 315 The States

Lecture 316 But we are now in March

Lecture 317 Avoiding people

Lecture 318 Covid-19 recession (part 1)

Lecture 319 Covid-19 recession (part 2)

Lecture 320 Covid-19 recession (part 3)

Lecture 321 Three scenarios (part 1)

Lecture 322 Three scenarios (part 2)

Lecture 323 Three scenarios (part 3)

Lecture 324 Americans struggle (part 1)

Lecture 325 Americans struggle (part 2)

Lecture 326 Americans struggle (part 3)

Lecture 327 Americans struggle (part 4)

Lecture 328 In conclusion (part 1)

Lecture 329 In conclusion (part 2)

Lecture 330 In conclusion (part 3)

Lecture 331 In conclusion (part 4)

Lecture 332 In conclusion (part 5)

Section 26: COMPULSORY: Football…India…Football

Lecture 333 Introduction

Lecture 334 Ticket sales

Lecture 335 Sponsors

Lecture 336 Television (Part 1)

Lecture 337 Television (Part 2)

Lecture 338 Football, and Economics in India (Part 1)

Lecture 339 Football, and Economics in India (Part 2)

Lecture 340 Football, and Economics in India (Part 3)

Lecture 341 Indian Super League

Lecture 342 The Homework Lecture! (Part 1)

Lecture 343 The Homework Lecture! (Part 2)

Lecture 344 The Homework Lecture! (Part 3)

Lecture 345 Economics of football around the world (Part 1)

Lecture 346 Economics of football around the world (Part 2)

Lecture 347 Economics of football around the world (Part 3)

Lecture 348 Economics of football around the world (Part 4)

Lecture 349 Podcast

Lecture 350 Football roots (Part 1)

Lecture 351 Football roots (Part 2)

Lecture 352 Football roots (Part 3)

Lecture 353 Football roots (Part 4)

Lecture 354 Should India bid for the World Cup? (Part 1)

Lecture 355 Should India bid for the World Cup? (Part 2)

Lecture 356 Questions, questions, questions

Lecture 357 Annual Review

Lecture 358 ESL/Harry Kane (Part 1)

Lecture 359 ESL/Harry Kane (Part 2)

Lecture 360 ESL/Harry Kane (Part 3)

Section 27: Compulsory for the Diploma : The Nigerian Economy

Lecture 361 Introduction

Lecture 362 The Economy: An overview

Lecture 363 Impact of Covid - just one example

Lecture 364 Covid-19 - wider implications

Lecture 365 Stimulus

Lecture 366 A positive note

Section 28: Compulsory for the Diploma : Multiple Choice tests - Macro

Lecture 367 Multiple choice test 1 - pt 1

Lecture 368 Multiple choice test 1 - pt 2

Lecture 369 Multiple choice test 1 - pt 3

Lecture 370 Multiple choice test 1 - pt 4

Lecture 371 Multiple choice test 1 -pt 5

Lecture 372 Multiple Choice test 2 - pt 1

Lecture 373 Multiple Choice test 2 - pt 2

Lecture 374 Multiple Choice test 2 - pt 3

Lecture 375 Multiple choice test 2 - pt 4

Lecture 376 Multiple choice test 2 - pt 5

Lecture 377 Multiple Choice test 3 - pt 1

Lecture 378 Multiple choice test 3 - pt 2

Lecture 379 Multiple choice test 3 - pt 3

Lecture 380 Multiple choice test 3 - pt 4

Lecture 381 Multiple choice test 3 - pt 5

Lecture 382 Multiple choice test 4 - pt 1

Lecture 383 Multiple choice test 4 - pt 2

Lecture 384 Multiple choice test 4 - pt 3

Lecture 385 Multiple choice test 4 - pt 4

Lecture 386 Multiple choice test 4 - pt 5

Lecture 387 Multiple choice test 5 - pt 1

Lecture 388 Multiple choice test 5 - pt 2

Lecture 389 Multiple choice test 5 - pt 3

Lecture 390 Multiple choice test 5 - pt 4

Lecture 391 Multiple choice test 5 - pt 5

Lecture 392 Multiple choice test 6 - pt 1

Lecture 393 Multiple choice test 6 - pt 2

Lecture 394 Multiple choice test 6 - pt 3

Lecture 395 Multiple choice test 6 - pt 4

Lecture 396 Multiple choice test 6 - pt 5

Lecture 397 Multiple choice test 6 - pt 6

Lecture 398 Multiple choice test 6 - pt 7

Section 29: Compulsory for the Diploma : Multiple choice tests - Micro

Lecture 399 Multiple choice test 1 - pt 1

Lecture 400 Multiple choice test 1 - pt 2

Lecture 401 Multiple choice test 1 - pt 3

Lecture 402 Multiple choice test 1 - pt 4

Lecture 403 Multiple choice test 1 - pt 5

Lecture 404 Multiple choice test 2 - pt 1

Lecture 405 Multiple choice test 2 - pt 2

Lecture 406 Multiple choice test 2 - pt 3

Lecture 407 Multiple choice test 2 - pt 4

Lecture 408 Multiple choice test 2 - pt 5

Lecture 409 Multiple choice test 3 - one part

Section 30: Financial markets and Monetary Policy

Lecture 410 Money

Lecture 411 Money Supply

Lecture 412 Monetarist theory of inflation - part 1

Lecture 413 Monetarist theory of inflation - pt 2

Lecture 414 Money market, capital market and foreign exchange market - pt 1

Lecture 415 Money market, capital market and foreign exchange market - pt 2

Lecture 416 Roles of financial markets - pt 1

Lecture 417 Roles of financial markets - pt 2

Lecture 418 Inverse relationship - pt 1

Lecture 419 Inverse relationship - pt 2

Lecture 420 Inverse relationship - pt 3

Lecture 421 Investment banks - pt 1

Lecture 422 Investment Banks - pt 2

Lecture 423 Investment Banks - pt 3

Lecture 424 Commercial Banks and the UK Economy - pt 1

Lecture 425 Commercial Banks and the UK Economy - pt 2

Lecture 426 Commercial banks and the UK Economy - pt 3

Lecture 427 Central Banks and Monetary Policy - pt 1

Lecture 428 Central Banks and Monetary Policy - pt 2

Lecture 429 Central Banks and Monetary Policy - pt 3

Lecture 430 Central Banks and Monetary Policy - pt 4

Lecture 431 Problems with Monetary Policy - pt 1

Lecture 432 Problems with Monetary Policy - pt 2

Lecture 433 Interest rates and the Transmission Mechanism - pt 1

Lecture 434 Interest rates and the Transmission Mechanism - pt 2

Lecture 435 Interest rates and the Transmission Mechanism - pt 3

Lecture 436 Interest rates and the transmission Mechanism - pt 4

Lecture 437 Interest rates and exchange rates - pt 1

Lecture 438 Interest rates and exchange rates - pt 2

Lecture 439 Quantitative Easing

Lecture 440 Regulation of the financial system

Lecture 441 Regulatory bodies - 1

Lecture 442 Regulatory bodies - 2

Lecture 443 Regulatory bodies - 3

Lecture 444 Liquidity ratio - pt 1

Lecture 445 Liquidity ratio - pt 2

Lecture 446 Moral hazard - part 1

Lecture 447 Moral hazard - part 2

Lecture 448 Moral hazard - part 3

Lecture 449 Shocks

Lecture 450 Banks fail - but why? Part 1

Lecture 451 Banks fail - but why? - part 2

Lecture 452 Banks fail - but why? part 3

Lecture 453 Revision - part 1

Lecture 454 Revision - part 2

Lecture 455 Revision - part 3

Lecture 456 Revision - part 4

Lecture 457 Revision - part 5

Section 31: Optional : Before…and After

Lecture 458 Introduction

Lecture 459 Market Failure

Lecture 460 Market Failure

Lecture 461 General Election

Lecture 462 General Election

Lecture 463 General Election

Lecture 464 General Election

Lecture 465 General Election

Lecture 466 The £ surges

Lecture 467 The £ surges

Lecture 468 Breakthrough Lifts Company Shares

Lecture 469 Inflation unexpectedly holds steady

Lecture 470 Exports slowdown bolsters trade

Lecture 471 Private sector slides

Lecture 472 Employment falls by largest margin

Lecture 473 Public borrowing rises

Lecture 474 House Price Growth

Lecture 475 And another thing we've learned…

Lecture 476 Retail sales fail to bounce…

Section 32: Compulsory for the Diploma : Covid - 19: The Elderly and the Economy

Lecture 477 Part 1

Lecture 478 Part 2

Lecture 479 Part 3

Lecture 480 Part 4

Lecture 481 Part 5

Lecture 482 Part 6

Lecture 483 Part 7

Lecture 484 Part 8

Lecture 485 Part 9

Lecture 486 Part 10

Section 33: Compulsory : Oxford Diploma section

Lecture 487 Introduction

Lecture 488 Difficult financial backdrop

Lecture 489 Squeezing public sector - pt 1

Lecture 490 Squeezing public sector - pt 2

Lecture 491 Levelling up

Lecture 492 What happens next

Lecture 493 Covid and Brexit

Lecture 494 Paul

Lecture 495 Andrew

Lecture 496 Douglas

Lecture 497 Julian

Lecture 498 Chris

Section 34: Oxford Diploma Section part II - South Africa

Lecture 499 Introduction

Lecture 500 Stimulus package - pt 1

Lecture 501 Stimulus package - pt 2

Lecture 502 Loan Guarantee Scheme - pt 1

Lecture 503 Loan Guarantee Scheme - pt 2

Lecture 504 Snapshot - pt 1

Lecture 505 Snapshot - pt 2

Lecture 506 Economic background - pt 1

Lecture 507 Economic background - pt 2

Lecture 508 Economic background - pt 3

Lecture 509 Inequality - pt 1

Lecture 510 Inequality - pt 2

Lecture 511 Economic effects of the lockdown

Lecture 512 Newspapers

Section 35: Oxford Diploma section - part 3 - Budgets

Lecture 513 Introduction

Lecture 514 Budget deficits

Lecture 515 Budget deficits in greater detail - part 1

Lecture 516 Budget deficits in greater detail - part 2

Lecture 517 Inflation

Lecture 518 The state of the economy

Lecture 519 Reducing the budget deficit by cutting public sector spending

Lecture 520 Raising taxes

Lecture 521 Economic growth

Lecture 522 Print money? - part 1

Lecture 523 Print money? - part 2

Lecture 524 Print money? - part 3

Lecture 525 Modern Monetary Theory

Lecture 526 Policy implications of Modern Monetary Theory

Lecture 527 Know this about the economy

Lecture 528 The 2021 Budget - part 1

Lecture 529 The Budget - part 2

Lecture 530 The homework - part 1

Lecture 531 The homework - part 2

Lecture 532 Why not stop waste? - pt 1

Lecture 533 Why not stop waste ? - pt 2

Lecture 534 GDP and Public Finances in Charts

Lecture 535 Unemployment

Lecture 536 Furloughing

Section 36: Oxford Diploma section - part 4 : Brexit Updates!

Lecture 537 Brexit: the update - 1

Section 37: Oxford Diploma section - part 5 : Consumer confidence

Lecture 538 Introduction

Lecture 539 Consumer confidence

Lecture 540 Factors affecting consumption

Lecture 541 Consumer confidence - outlook and importance

Lecture 542 How influential is confidence?

Lecture 543 A revision lecture!

Lecture 544 What are the risks - in the UK and YOUR country?

Lecture 545 Continuing with consumption…and confidence (Part 1)

Lecture 546 Continuing with consumption…and confidence (Part 2)

Lecture 547 Consumer sentiment

Lecture 548 Consumer sentiment - the interpretation

Lecture 549 And now for Business Spending

Lecture 550 But what about savings and the economy?

Lecture 551 Back to consumer confidence…

Lecture 552 Conclusion - and controversy

Section 38: Optional : April Fools' Economics

Lecture 553 Introduction

Lecture 554 Pranks

Lecture 555 Cutting costs

Lecture 556 Guardian on Twitter

Lecture 557 More Pranks

Lecture 558 Conclusion

Section 39: Optional : Mind maps

Lecture 559 Teaching is the art of causing learning (part 1)

Lecture 560 Teaching is the art of causing learning (part 2)

Lecture 561 Teaching is the art of causing learning (part 3)

Lecture 562 Mind maps

Lecture 563 Mind maps (part 2)

Section 40: Mind Map a Textbook!

Lecture 564 Mind Map a Textbook!

Section 41: Optional : This is NOT Economics but very important you watch

Lecture 565 Lecture 1

Lecture 566 Lecture 2

Lecture 567 Lecture 3

Lecture 568 Lecture 4

Lecture 569 Lecture 5

Lecture 570 Lecture 6

Section 42: The Economic Burden of Strokes

Lecture 571 The Economic Costs of a Stroke

Lecture 572 Looking at some data

Lecture 573 Some studies

Lecture 574 The global burden

Lecture 575 Art Therapy and Strokes

Lecture 576 Can the arts help stroke rehabilitation?

Lecture 577 Therapies (Part 1)

Lecture 578 Therapies (Part 2)

Lecture 579 Therapies (Part 3)

Lecture 580 Over to you! (Part 1)

Lecture 581 Over to you! (Part 2)

Section 43: Improving your English (Optional)

Lecture 582 Introduction

Lecture 583 Lesson 1

Lecture 584 Lesson 2

Lecture 585 Lesson 3

Lecture 586 Lesson 4

Lecture 587 Lesson 5

Lecture 588 Lesson 6

Lecture 589 Lesson 7

Lecture 590 Lesson 8

Section 44: Bonus

Lecture 591 Bonus

Students who will participate - and learn - in discussions,Anyone wanting to progress from Beginner to Advanced in Economics,Those who learn through a variety of styles,All those beginning Economics and want bite-sized chunks,Someone who wants to master the basics in order to understand the complex,Those who like REVISION LESSONS, case studies and questions,Everyone who likes regular updates to their knowledge through discussion