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Courses/Finance/Economics

Economic Indicators Series: Interest Rates

A practical course on how interest rates are built, set, transmitted, priced by markets, and felt in real decisions.

Created byJason Dean
BeginnerUpdated Jul 8, 2026
Economic Indicators Series: Interest Rates

What You'll Learn

check_circleBreak an interest rate into real return, inflation expectations, default risk, liquidity, and term premium.
check_circleDistinguish nominal rates from real rates when assessing the burden of debt or return on saving.
check_circleExplain how central banks steer overnight rates and how market rates are priced around that anchor.
check_circleInterpret yield-curve shapes, inversions, and policy-day surprises.
check_circleApply rate literacy to mortgages, bonds, equities, pensions, leases, valuations, and client decisions.

About This Course

This course explains interest rates as the price of moving money across time and shows how that price reaches professional and personal decisions. It begins with the components of a rate: real return, expected inflation, default risk, liquidity, and term premium. It then distinguishes nominal from real rates and explains which rate a central bank actually controls.

The course follows policy through the overnight market, corridor systems, open-market operations, short rates, long yields, mortgages, business credit, asset prices, and the real economy. It also explains yield curves, inversion, FOMC decision days, zero-rate policy, QE, and historical cases from Volcker to the 2022-23 hiking cycle. The practical purpose is to help viewers see which rate moved, why it moved, when it reprices, and what decision changes.

TARGET AUDIENCE
Canadian CPD viewers, including accountants, lawyers, advisors, analysts, managers, business owners, and professionals who need to interpret economic data in their work and personal financial decisions.

Your Instructor

Jason Dean
Jason Dean

Associate Professor of Economics | King's University College at Western

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star93 reviews

Dr. Jason Dean is an economics professor and applied economist with experience teaching macroeconomics, microeconomics, labour economics, economic history, public policy, and applied economic topics to university, college, and professional audiences. He holds a PhD in Economics from McGill University, an MA in Economics from the University of Guelph, and an Honours BBA from Wilfrid Laurier University. His academic work focuses on labour markets, immigration, housing, poverty, economic history, and public policy. He has also worked as a health economist and economic research analyst, bringing both academic and applied experience to his teaching. Jason has taught at King’s University College, Wilfrid Laurier University, Sheridan College, McMaster University Continuing Education, McGill University, Kwansei Gakuin University in Japan, Renmin University in Beijing, and Wuhan University of Technology. His courses are built to make economic ideas practical, clear, and useful for real decisions. His peer-reviewed research has appeared in journals including Regional Science and Urban Economics, Cliometrica, Journal of Housing Economics, IZA Journal of Development and Migration, Contemporary Jewry, Journal of International Migration and Integration, International Journal of Social Economics, and health economics journals. His policy work has been published through the Montreal Economic Institute, and he has provided media commentary on labour markets, housing, public policy, immigration, and the Canadian economy. Jason’s CPD courses help professionals understand how economic indicators, policy decisions, inflation, GDP, interest rates, labour markets, and consumer demand connect to business conditions, client decisions, financial planning, and the broader economy. Selected Publications: - “Income Decline, Financial Insecurity, Landlord Screening and Renter Mobility,” Regional Science and Urban Economics, 2022. - “The Linguistic Wage Gap in Québec, 1901 to 1951,” Cliometrica, 2022. - “Sexual Orientation and Homeownership in Canada,” Journal of Housing Economics, 2020. - “Does it Matter if Immigrants Work in Jobs Related to their Education?” IZA Journal of Development and Migration, 2018. - “Labour Market Attainment of Canadian Jews During the First Two Decades of the 20th Century,” Contemporary Jewry, 2017. - “Economic Integration of Pre-WWI Immigrants from the British Isles in the Canadian Labour Market,” Journal of International Migration and Integration, 2016. - “Religiosity and Female Labour Market Attainment in Canada: The Protestant Exception,” International Journal of Social Economics, 2016.

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We are a registered provider with 327+ associations and regulatory bodies worldwide. We operate across 29 global markets including Canada, the US, Australia, and the UK. Every course page clearly displays its specific accreditations. Upon completion, you receive a professional certificate that can be validated online. Our certificates include all necessary accreditation details, credit hours, and completion dates, and are formatted specifically to meet the submission requirements of most global regulatory bodies.