Course Information
Course Overview
Micro economics and Business
What are you most looking for in a course about Business and (Micro) Economics?
1. Economics ! (Of course!)
2. Especially microeconomics ! (Obviously...)
3. Regularly updated lectures on Business and Microeconomics
4. Many examples of Microeconomics etc.
5. Active participation in Q/A discussing topics in the course
6. Case Studies
7. High level of Instructor involvement (preferably from an Instructor who has taught Microeconomics and Business at different levels, in real life and for many years!)
8. Regular Educational Announcements
9. Variety in lectures
10. Application of Microeconomics principles
11. Suggestions/links to further reading/watching
12. On completion of the course, free access to any one other course (not necessarily in Microeconomics either!)
This course in Microeconomics and Business has all of the above.
Update:
Trade balance (goods vs services)
Current account vs bilateral deficit narratives
Gains from trade and interdependence
Tariffs: incidence, pass-through, deadweight loss
Retaliation and trade war dynamics
Elasticity of demand/supply; substitution effects
Trade diversion and third-country substitution
Exchange rates and competitiveness
Inflation transmission from trade policy
Policy uncertainty and investment effects
Climate externalities and market failure
Physical climate risk vs transition risk
Climate risk pricing and risk premia
Cost of capital and sovereign borrowing spreads
Insurance market withdrawal / uninsurability
Risk pooling limits and correlated shocks
Regulation/standards as risk reduction
Adaptation investment and resilience finance
Energy market design (energy-only vs capacity)
Reliability as a system constraint
Capacity adequacy and reserve margins
Dispatchable generation and flexibility
Grid transmission/distribution bottlenecks
Storage economics and demand response
Peak demand, load growth, load duration curves
Option value of reliability resources
AI/data-centre electricity demand as a driver
General-purpose technologies (GPTs) and diffusion
Complementary investments (skills, data, processes)
Adoption S-curves and productivity lags
Measurement/realization of productivity gains
Capital deepening vs TFP growth
Automation vs augmentation (substitutes vs complements)
Skill-biased technological change
Job polarization and entry-level displacement
Bargaining power (labour vs capital)
Labour share vs capital share of income
Competition policy and rent concentration
“Jobless growth”
Social legitimacy (“social permission”) of technology
Welfare states, safety nets, and adjustment costs
Education and reskilling policy
Economic statecraft and coercive diplomacy
Credible threats, deterrence, commitment problems
Signalling, reputation, and strategic interaction
Sanctions/retaliation risk and market reactions
Structured finance and contract design
Sukuk structures and asset-backing
Risk allocation and cash-flow waterfalls
Information asymmetry, certification, and standards
Liquidity, investor base diversification
Agglomeration economies and clusters
FDI attraction and place-based industrial policy
Spillovers (knowledge, suppliers, networks)
Human capital pipelines and skill ecosystems
Infrastructure as a complement to investment
Institutions and political legitimacy
Collective action and protest dynamics
State capacity and enforcement costs
Credibility of reform and path dependence
Political economy of ideology vs material incentives
Now including a brand new collection of Case Studies that examine the economic policies of President Trump following his election on November 6th 2024. These look in particular at:
Tariffs
China’s growth
World Economy
Tax cuts
Exporters
Impact on seniors
Exchange rate
BEFORE YOU ENROL:
1. Watch the Preview video on Microeconomics
2. Watch the sample lectures on Business and Microeconomics
3. Thoroughly read this course description
4. Be fully aware that participation is encouraged - that means there are Microeconomics manuals (several) numerous discussions (Q/A sections) and regular Education Announcements
5. To achieve the Oxford Diploma (Microeconomics and Business) 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.
MOTIVATION
I 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 is to raise money for charity. (100% of revenue goes to the charity) Fundamentally this course is about helping you.
About the course
This is a course covering the key areas in micro economics at a beginners/intermediate level. It is the principles of economics that are emphasised, repeated and supported with notes. Very clearly explained and reinforced with notes and revision lectures. This course is IDEAL for the beginner who wants to advance quickly.
Topics covered:
Market failure
Taxation
Subsidies
Demand
Supply
Price elasticity of demand
Price elasticity of supply
Elasticity and how to interpret it
Elasticity - calculations
Elasticity - shape of curves
Elasticity - tax/subsidy incidence
Ceteris paribus
Consumer surplus
Producer surplus
Microeconomics of football
This course is ideal for the BEGINNER who wishes to progress as well as someone with experience in studying Economics as the topics are pitched at several levels.
Why learn from me?
5 years experience as a Buyer for a multinational car company
Owner of two companies in the Education sector
Trainer of Economics and Business teachers
30 years experience in teaching/lecturing Economics in Oxford (UK) and worldwide
Highly responsive to questions asked relating to lectures
Constantly improving and developing courses at Udemy
REGULAR ANNOUNCEMENTS MAKE SURE THIS COURSE IS ALWAYS UP TO DATE.
Course Content
- 18 section(s)
- 120 lecture(s)
- Section 1 General Introduction
- Section 2 20 second introduction
- Section 3 For SUBSCRIBERS/PERSONAL PLAN only
- Section 4 ECONOMICS FOR COMPLETE BEGINNERS - if this is you then start here!
- Section 5 Compulsory : Introduction
- Section 6 Compulsory : Obesity and Economics
- Section 7 Economics 2025/6
- Section 8 AI Friend or Foe?
- Section 9 Modern Microeconomics
- Section 10 Mesonomics
- Section 11 Ten
- Section 12 Country-specific
- Section 13 Chat GPT and Conclusion
- Section 14 Quiz
- Section 15 Quiz
- Section 16 THE BUSINESS SECTION : man with a van
- Section 17 COMPULSORY Mind Map a Textbook!
- Section 18 COMPULSORY Oxford School of Learning Diploma
What You’ll Learn
- Microeconomics - key concepts, Microeconomics applied through Case Studies, Key Business concepts, Apply ceteris paribus
Reviews
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SSaurabh Kaushik
Excellent Couse...
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JJose Arreza
I like what I am consuming so far. It sets up a good background on the current global economic status to setup the context before actually delving into the course.
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SSélim MIRA
I hate to devalue someone else's work but this course must be the worst I've taken on udemy, out of about 50 or so courses. Funnily enough, there's a video about "making the most of your time" which is exactly the opposite of what you'll do with this course. A few specific points that make this course so bad : - Most of the videos don't even address the topic of microeconomics but are random pieces of advice repeated over and over - Most of the videos are filmed with a smartphone while wandering over in the countryside, which is both cheap and not helpful in getting points across - The lecture isn't structured at all, it is more of a patchwork of videos with very little coherency. Chapters and invidiual videos don't even have a proper name to learn in a structured manner. - So many PDFs and external ressources. If someone is to use udemy, it's to take advantage of it's learning format. If I wanted to learn through a book, I would buy a book. - So much content is just displaying definitions on the screen and reading them. If I wanted someone to read a book, I would buy an audio book. - So many resources that don't belong to the author, it's borderline plagiarism - The sections providing actual learning value about economics are scarce and there's still too much screen time with just text on it - The brand / name Oxford usage is borderline misleading. Cherry on top, on the course 214 the tutor goes as far as to be happy to be an annoyance during a "timed quiz test". I wouldn't recommand anyone use this course although everyone's learning style is different but when I purchase a course on udemy i'm expecting - A clear and well organized content - Decent quality audio and video - A comprehensive approach of the topic - To save time This is definitely not the case with this course.
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MManya Hora
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