Note 1 Money
Note 2 Demand For Money
Note 3 Supply Of Money
Note 4 Types Of Financial Institution
Note 5 Functions Of Financial Institution
Note 6 Control Of Financial Institution
Note 7 Inflation
Note 8 Deflation
Note 9 Tools Of Monetary Policies
Note 10 The Nigeria Capital & Money Market
Note 11 International Trade
Note 12 Balance Of Payment
Note 13 Public Finance
Note 14 Taxation & Financial policies
Note 15 Budgeting In Public Sector
Note 16 Public Debt
Note 17 National Income
Note 18 Economic Growth & Development
Note 19 Development Planning
Note 20 Unemployment
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The Core Courses:
Elective
Courses:
2. Taxation
4. Insurance
6. Strategic Management
Why Do We Study Economics?
There are many reasons for studying economics. First,
economics is essential to understanding the world in which you live and work.
What determines the prices of the goods and services on which you spend your
income, and the prices of the stocks and bonds in which you invest your
savings? How does education affect the lifetime earnings of people? Why do some
people earn so much and others so little? Why do some jobs pay high wages while
other jobs pay low wages? How do firms operating in different market
environments decide what quantities to produce of their product outputs, what
prices to charge for these outputs, and what quantities of labour and capital
inputs to employ? How can economic analysis help us understand and solve the
problems of environmental pollution and resource depletion? What determines the
level of national income and aggregate employment, the rate of price inflation,
the rate of unemployment, the rate of growth of aggregate output and
productivity, and the international value of the Canadian dollar? Why do
average standards of living vary so widely among and within countries?