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The Great Courses – Economics 3rd Edition
$60.00$374.00 (-84%)
It also features expanded coverage in areas of great public interest, such as anti-trust issues, corporate responsibility, and international financial crashes.
The Great Courses – Economics 3rd Edition
Check it out: The Great Courses – Economics 3rd Edition
We are all economists—when we work, buy, save, invest, pay taxes, and vote. It repays us many times over to be good economists. Economic issues are active in our lives every day. However, when the subject of economics comes up in conversation or on the news, we can find ourselves longing for a more sophisticated understanding of the fundamentals of economics.
How can I get an overview of the entire U.S. economy?
Why do budget deficits matter?
What exactly does the Federal Reserve do?
Why do most economists favor international trade so strongly?
Economics, 3rd Edition, will help you think about and discuss these and other economic issues that affect you and the nation every day—interest rates, unemployment, personal investing, budget deficits, globalization, and many more—with a greater level of knowledge and sophistication.
Designed for those who haven’t already purchased our 2nd Edition economics course, this enlarged and reorganized 3rd Edition includes updated statistics and discussions of more recent events. It also features expanded coverage in areas of great public interest, such as anti-trust issues, corporate responsibility, and international financial crashes.
Professor M.Econ. Timothy Taylor
Course Lecture Titles:
Professor Introduction
01. How Economists Think
02. Division of Labor
03. Supply and Demand
04. Price Floors and Ceilings
05. Elasticity
06. The Labor Market and Wages
07. Financial Markets and Rates of Return
08. Personal Investing
09. From Perfect Competition to Monopoly
10. Antitrust and Competition Policy
11. Regulation and Deregulation
12. Negative Externalities and the Environment
13. Positive Externalities and Technology
14. Public Goods
15. Poverty and Welfare Programs
16. Inequality
17. Imperfect Information and Insurance
18. Corporate and Political Governance
19. Macroeconomics and GDP
20. Economic Growth
21. Unemployment
22. Inflation
23. The Balance of Trade
24. Aggregate Supply and Aggregate Demand
25. The Unemployment-Inflation Tradeoff
26. Fiscal Policy and Budget Deficits
27. Countercyclical Fiscal Policy
28. Budget Deficits and National Saving
29. Money and Banking
30. The Federal Reserve and Its Powers
31. The Conduct of Monetary Policy
32. The Gains of International Trade
33. The Debates over Protectionism
34. Exchange Rates
35. International Financial Crashes
36. A Global Economic Perspective
Credits
Business online course
Information about business:
Business is the activity of making one’s living or making money by producing or buying and selling products (such as goods and services).
[need quotation to verify] Simply put, it is “any activity or enterprise entered into for profit.
It does not mean it is a company, a corporation, partnership, or have any such formal organization, but it can range from a street peddler to General Motors.”
Having a business name does not separate the business entity from the owner, which means that the owner of the business is responsible and liable for debts incurred by the business.
If the business acquires debts, the creditors can go after the owner’s personal possessions.
A business structure does not allow for corporate tax rates. The proprietor is personally taxed on all income from the business.