
ECONOMICS
10 courses | 2 months (estimated).
For Students, Professionals & Entrepreneurs.
STUDY FREE
Please scroll down to access the Audiobook courses for this Diploma Program. You can listen to them freely via YouTube.
To obtain our Diploma qualification, your must score at least 50% pass mark in our "Thesis-based" examination. To book your exam slot, please scroll to the bottom of the page. Also, you'd be able to download your FREE eBook copies of all assigned courses after booking for your exam.


ELIGIBILITY & DURATION
This program is 100% online and on-demand.
Anyone, irrespective of their qualifications and educational backgrounds (high school leavers, first degree, postgraduate etc) can apply. We welcome all learners to this vocational diploma program.
It is self-paced. You can start and conclude at anytime. If you however wish to apply for our Diploma certification, you must then book for our examinations.
Our exams are written, thesis-based project assignments. You will be given a real-life case scenario, and then asked to produce a document that proffers a solution to the problem. During the entire duration of your thesis project, you'd be assigned an academic supervisor who will provide guidance and finally grade your project delivery.
We expect that all our students should submit their thesis-based project assignments within 90 days from the date they book their exams.
Circular Economy
The Circular Economy is an economic system that aims to eliminate waste and keep resources in use for as long as possible. It represents a systemic shift away from the traditional linear model of “take, make, dispose,” towards a more regenerative approach in which products, materials, and resources are reused, repaired, refurbished, and recycled. In this model, economic growth is decoupled from resource consumption. Rather than relying on the extraction of finite raw materials, the circular economy seeks to create closed-loop systems where materials flow continuously in a productive cycle. It is both an economic and environmental response to the challenges posed by resource scarcity, climate change, and unsustainable consumption patterns.

Introduction to Renewable Energy Economics
Energy is the engine of modern economies. Every good produced, every service delivered, and every moment of modern life is underpinned by energy use. Understanding how energy markets function is essential for making informed decisions about energy policy, investments, and the shift toward renewables. This chapter introduces the core principles of energy economics, including supply and demand, market structures, price formation, and elasticity—providing the analytical tools needed to assess renewable energy in economic terms.

Sustainable Finance & Investment
Sustainable finance is an approach to financial decision-making that explicitly incorporates environmental, social, and governance (ESG) considerations alongside traditional financial analysis. It aims not only to generate competitive returns for investors but also to contribute positively to society and the environment. This integrated thinking recognizes that long-term economic performance is inseparable from ecological health, social equity, and strong institutional governance. In a world facing accelerating climate change, widening social inequalities, and governance crises, sustainable finance seeks to reorient capital flows toward more resilient and inclusive economic models. It challenges the narrow focus of conventional finance on short-term shareholder value, offering instead a broader vision of stakeholder capitalism—where returns are measured not only in financial terms but also in the positive impact delivered. The concept is not entirely new. Ethical investing dates back centuries, with religious institutions historically avoiding investments deemed immoral. What’s different today is the scale, sophistication, and urgency of integrating sustainability into mainstream finance.

Blockchain's role in Green Supplychains
Every product we touch — the food on our table, the phone in our pocket, the clothes we wear — has a story. That story begins in a farm, a factory, or a mine, and winds its way through ships, trucks, warehouses, and retailers before reaching us. Hidden in that journey are some of the most pressing challenges of our time: carbon emissions, resource depletion, labor exploitation, and waste. Global supply chains are the lifeblood of modern economies, but they are also among the largest contributors to climate change and environmental degradation. They account for more than 80% of global trade and nearly two-thirds of greenhouse gas emissions in many industries. As the world pushes toward sustainability, supply chains sit at the crossroads of opportunity and responsibility. At the same time, trust in sustainability claims is eroding. Consumers are asking tough questions: Was this cotton shirt really grown sustainably? Was this cobalt for my smartphone mined ethically? Is this “carbon-neutral” product truly offsetting emissions, or is it just clever marketing? The rise of greenwashing — unverified or misleading environmental claims — has made transparency more important than ever. This is where blockchain enters the conversation. Known widely as the backbone of cryptocurrencies, blockchain is in fact much more: a decentralized, tamper-resistant system of recordkeeping that can track and verify information across complex networks. In the context of green supply chains, blockchain offers something revolutionary — the ability to make sustainability claims transparent, traceable, and trustworthy.

Agribusiness & Agricultural Economics
Agriculture is more than just a means of producing food — it is the backbone of human civilization and the foundation of every economy. From the earliest domestication of plants and animals to today’s high-tech, data-driven farms, agriculture has fueled population growth, trade, and innovation. Yet, modern agribusiness faces unprecedented challenges: feeding a growing population, adapting to climate change, managing finite resources, and ensuring that farmers and rural communities share in the benefits of economic growth. This book, Agribusiness and Agricultural Economics, provides a comprehensive exploration of the forces shaping the agricultural sector today. It blends theory with real-world examples, guiding readers through the fundamental concepts of farm management, production economics, markets, finance, and supply chains, while also addressing pressing issues like sustainability, food security, and ethics.

Agriculture Supply-chain Finance
Agriculture remains the backbone of the global economy, feeding more than 8 billion people and employing nearly a quarter of the world’s workforce. Yet, for all its importance, agriculture continues to face a persistent challenge: access to timely, affordable finance. Farmers—especially smallholders—often operate on razor-thin margins, constrained by inadequate liquidity, volatile prices, climate shocks, and inefficient supply chains. The result is a cycle of underinvestment, low productivity, and vulnerability that affects not just rural communities but the entire food system. Agricultural Supply Chain Finance (Agri-SCF) has emerged as a powerful tool to address this financing gap. By leveraging relationships, data, and transactions across the agricultural value chain, Agri-SCF provides farmers, aggregators, processors, and traders with access to capital when and where they need it most. Unlike traditional farm credit, which often relies solely on collateral or credit history, Agri-SCF takes a more holistic view—financing based on future receivables, confirmed orders, and the strength of supply chain partnerships.

Business Strategy
Businesses today face unprecedented complexity: disruptive technologies, global competition, shifting consumer expectations, and heightened sustainability demands. Navigating this landscape requires more than intuition; it requires a deep understanding of strategy as both an art and a science. This book distills decades of research, frameworks, and real-world experience into actionable insights, equipping leaders, managers, and entrepreneurs with the tools they need to thrive.

Disruptive Leadership
The room was quiet, except for the hum of a dozen laptops and the sound of your own heartbeat. You’ve just been told the rules have changed. A new competitor has come out of nowhere, rewriting your industry’s playbook. Your customers are flocking to them. Your board is anxious. Your team is looking at you for answers. What do you do? In that moment, you have two choices:You can defend the past — protecting what you’ve already built, doubling down on what once worked.Or you can disrupt the present — risking your comfort, your reputation, maybe even your job, to create a new future. This is the essence of disruptive leadership. Disruptive leaders don’t just adapt to change — they drive it. They don’t wait for permission to reinvent the rules — they rewrite them. They have the courage to dismantle what’s no longer working, even if they built it themselves. But make no mistake: this is not reckless leadership. True disruption requires discipline, vision, and a willingness to take others on the journey with you. It is about building organizations that are not only capable of surviving change — but thriving because of it. The world needs more of these leaders.Because disruption is no longer an exception — it is the new normal.

Risk Management
This course is for executives, risk professionals, entrepreneurs, and anyone who must make decisions under uncertainty — which is to say, everyone. Across 40 chapters, we will move from fundamentals to advanced techniques, with real-world case studies and practical tools you can put to work immediately. Our goal is simple:To help you transform risk management from a defensive shield into a strategic compass — guiding your organization toward smarter decisions, stronger resilience, and sustainable growth. Welcome to the future of risk management.Let’s learn to dance with uncertainty — and win.

Blockchain & Cryptocurrencies
We stand at the early stages of what may become one of the defining technological shifts of our century. Just as the internet transformed how we communicate and access information, blockchain may transform how we exchange value, coordinate action, and govern society. This is more than a story about technology — it is a story about power, trust, freedom, and the future of human coordination. And it is a story that is still being written. Welcome to the world of blockchain and cryptocurrencies. Let’s explore it together.



