GCSE Economics revision guide

  • E-Book comes as a pdf and is available immediately after purchase
  • Comprehensive list of definitions and coverage of syllabus
  • Clear and simplified explanations
  • Specifically based on new GCSE syllabus from 2019. – Choose AQA or OCR
  • Designed to help answer potential exam questions
  • For Network licence (unlimited distribution within an educational establishment) – £85.00
  • Sample of GCSE Revision Guide

Specific syllabus

AS AQA economics revision guide

A4-Cover-AQA-AS
  • Specific AQA AS economics revision guide (unit 1 + 2) – just £4.00
  • Updated for the new AQA economics syllabus.
  • Last updated June 2022.
  • E-book. It comes in pdf format and is sent immediately after purchase.
  • Trademark simplicity and clarity of presentation.
  • Significantly expanded on previous version, with not just required knowledge, but also examples of evaluation for each topic.
  • For schools – See: Network License – AS AQA Economics (£45.00)

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Historical UK national debt

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Click to enlarge National debt (public sector debt) is the total amount of liabilities the government owe to the private sector (plus liabilities held by Central Bank). National debt is typically bought by domestic private sector (banks, insurance funds, pension funds) and foreign investors (foreign banks) Recently some has been bought by the Bank of …

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Factors that affect the housing market

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The housing market is influenced by the state of the economy, interest rates, real income and changes in the size of the population. As well as these demand-side factors, house prices will be determined by available supply. With periods of rising demand and limited supply, we will see rising house prices, rising rents and increased …

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Policies to reduce cost-push inflation

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Cost-push inflation is caused by higher costs of production, such as rising oil prices, higher nominal wages, and increased commodity prices. To reduce this kind of inflation, the government can pursue deflationary monetary policy and/or supply side policies. But, in truth, it is difficult to reduce cost-push inflation because higher interest rates are likely to …

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The impact of supply bottlenecks on world economy

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Bottlenecks refer to the situation where firms are unable to meet demand because of delays, shortages and lack of spare capacity. Bottlenecks can occur from a spike in demand or disruptions to supply. They can lead to higher prices, inflation, shortages of goods and even lower economic growth. For many years, we have grown accustomed …

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Inflation tax

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“By a continuing process of inflation, governments can confiscate, secretly and unobserved, an important part of the wealth of their citizens. By this method they not only confiscate, but they confiscate arbitrarily,” John Maynard Keynes, “The economic consequences of the peace” Inflation tax is an implicit tax on nominal assets, such as cash, bonds and …

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Learning effect – definition, explanation

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The learning effect can mean one of two things How education leads to increased productivity and higher wages How production processes can learn from past production to increase productivity over time. The learning effect can lead to a learning curve – which represents how average costs of production change over time. Learning effect – Education …

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