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Learner Reviews & Feedback for Trade, Immigration and Exchange Rates in a Globalized World by IE Business School

4.8
stars
268 ratings

About the Course

This is the second of the three courses part of the Globalization, Economic Growth and Stability Specialization. This course will focus on facets of globalization that affect a country´s economic perspectives and decisions. Globalization has recently been the predominant subject in many political debates, and this course will go into the determinants of globalization. It will be separated into four modules; the first module will explain exchange rates. It will cover what determines exchange rate and how different exchange rates affect the economy and the reality of currencies. The second module will explore trade, the reality of free trade, and what occurs to a country´s economy with protectionism. The third module will go into the balance of payments, it will help you understand how economic transactions between a country and the rest of the world work. The fourth module will focus on Immigration, which is probably one of the most controversial subjects today. It will explain how migration affects host countries and it will cover current migration trends....

Top reviews

A

Aug 30, 2020

Excellent lectures. Extremely useful in understanding related macro economic issues. The lecturer is interesting, logical and clear. Hope she adds more material.

SM

May 2, 2021

Exceptional course content and blow-by-blow analysis of the benefits and pitfalls of Globalization/Trade and Migration. Well presented course.

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51 - 56 of 56 Reviews for Trade, Immigration and Exchange Rates in a Globalized World

By Mohamed Z

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Jun 7, 2021

By Rohan S

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Sep 14, 2021

Pretty good overall basic knowledge of global economic factors.

By suhas j

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Sep 15, 2021

It is a great course on International trade.

By Nihhar T

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May 18, 2020

An interesting course indeed

By Szabolcs V B

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Feb 19, 2023

Peer reviews are a real problem. Could devaluate the quality of the certificate sooner or later.

By Ole T B

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Feb 19, 2018

This has more in common with theology than Academia. The value of this course is as a introduction to a political discourse, not as a good description of the subject it tries to explain, for this is one sided and does not give the counter arguments nearly any time. The terms 'magic' and 'we believe' are used, this does not belong in academia.