100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached 4.2 TrustPilot
logo-home
Summary

Summary Complete CIE IGCSE 0987/0455 Economics Flashcards

Rating
4.0
(1)
Sold
1
Pages
25
Uploaded on
29-07-2023
Written in
2022/2023

This set of flashcards includes every detail and point you would use in most (if not all) Paper 2 Structured Questions in the CIE IGCSE 0987/0455 specification. Through the 2 years of studying CIE IGCSE Economics in my school, I have compiled all of my lesson notes, online materials, further research, and exam mark schemes into this single file. This set of notes offered me great assistance to fortunately achieve a grade 9 in Economics and the Top of Economics award in my year in my school. Only need specific topics out of the 6 units? Please find individual topics on my profile, sold for ~£2.99.

Show more Read less
Institution
Course









Whoops! We can’t load your doc right now. Try again or contact support.

Connected book

Written for

Institution
Study
Course
School year
200

Document information

Summarized whole book?
Yes
Uploaded on
July 29, 2023
Number of pages
25
Written in
2022/2023
Type
Summary

Subjects

Content preview

Nicole Li
1.1 The nature of the economic problem
Scarcity. The resources available are insufficient to satisfy all the unlimited human needs and wants. Therefore,
we must all make choices about how we use our limited resources by deciding what G&S we will produce and
What is the basic economic problem? consume.
Non-renewable resources cannot be replaced in time for humans to consume considering the rate in which we
Why are resources finite and limited in are using it up.
supply? Renewable resources take time and more finite resources to be produced.
1.2 The factors of production
Definition of production The using up of resources/FoP to produce G&S to satisfy human wants and needs
Two types of products Goods and services
What is a productive activity? using inputs (4FoP) to produce outputs (G&S)
Definition of a 'not productive activity' any activity/G&S that fails to satisfy a human need or want
Definition of 'producers' The people and organisations which combine FoP to produce G&S
Why is it impossible to satisfy all human Human wants=unlimited
wants? Resources=scarce relative to human wants/limited
Difference between human need and human Human needs=essential to human survival, can be satisfied
want. Human wants=not necessary for human survival, can never be fully satisfied
Definition of 'free goods' items that we may need or want that are without limit and freely available, and the production of it incurs zero
opportunity cost
Fully explain 4 characteristics of 'free goods', ∵unlimited in supply+freely available+not produced from scarce resources ∴people are not willing to pay for
list some examples them
items that are limited in supply+produced from scarce resources+not freely available, therefore people are
Definition of 'economic goods' willing to pay to obtain these limited economic goods in order to satisfy some of their wants
Our consumption of economic goods will
result in... fewer economic goods being available to other people
List some examples
No.
Even it is free of charge (=freely available)
it's produced from scarce resources
If a good is distributed out freely, is it a free +limited in supply
good? is economic good
Definition of 'consumption' the using up of G&S to satisfy human needs and wants
Definition of 'consumers' the people and organisations that buy G&S to satisfy some of their wants
Definition of 'consumption expenditure' the total amount consumers spend each period on economic goods
Consumers engage in trade or exchange with producers to obtain those economic goods they cannot produce
themselves to satisfy their wants. Can be monetary exchange (consumer pay with their wages) or barter
What is exchange? economy (exchange good with good).
To increase the production capacity of a firm. (Allocating more resources to the production of capital goods will
Why should we invest in capital goods? reduce the amount of resources available to produce consumer G&S.)
Definition of 'consumer good' an economic good that satisfies an immediate consumer need or want
consumer durables
non-durable goods
3 types of consumer goods consumer services
Definition of 'capital goods' economic goods that don't satisfy any immediate human needs or wants
What is an 'investment' the purchase of capital goods
Definition of 'Factors of Production (FoP)' the scarce resources we use up in the production of G&S to satisfy human needs and wants
Capital (man-made machinery needed to produce output)
Enterprise (the ability to organise production in a firm)
Labour (human skills and effort needed to produce output)
What are the 4FoP? (extras: in notes) Land (natural resources obtained from land)
What are 'factor rewards' the payment different FoP require and receive in order to participate in productive activity
Why do we need them? Producers are motivated by monetary returns to supply scarce resources to other firms.
Capital-interests
Enterprise-profits
Labour-wages
4 types of factor returns (extra: in notes) Land-rent
Formula for profits Total revenue−total costs
the ease with which resources or FoP can be moved from one productive activity to another without incurring
Definition of 'factor mobility' significant costs or a loss or output
within a firm
between firms in the same industry
between industries
4 movement patterns of FoP between different countries
increase total output of G&S (less productive activity→more)
allows different FoP to be moved into their best possible uses
enables firms to improve efficiency of production as the quantity and quality of FoP changes
Importance of factor mobility allows firms to change the type of G&S they produce as human needs and wants change
Occupational mobility (move among different productive activities)
2 types of factor mobility Geographic mobility (move among different places)
Explain the factor mobility of each of the FoP.
(see in notes)
1.3 Opportunity cost
Definition of 'opportunity cost' The next best alternative forgone.

, Basic econ. prob.=scarcity (resources available are insufficient to satisfy all of the human wants and needs)
Explain the relationship between the basic Therefore, we need to make choices on how to allocate these scarce resources to satisfy as many wants as
economic problem, choices and opportunity possible. (deciding on what to produce and consume)
cost The cost of choosing an option is giving up/forgoing the next best alternative, which is the opportunity cost.
How best to use scarce resources in an attempt to satisfy as many human wants as possible to maximise
Definition of 'resource allocation' economic welfare
Consumers must choose what to buy out of their limited incomes to satisfy as many of their wants as possible.
Producers must choose what to produce with their limited resources to maximise profits. Governments must
choose what services to provide out of their limited tax revenues.

What is the influence of opportunity cost on In Economics, we assume that humans are rational and that when making a decision, we will weigh out all of
decision making? the options and choose the option which maximises our satisfaction and imposes the lowest opportunity cost.
1.4 Production possibility curves
(PPC)
Complete term of PPC/PPF Production possibility curve/production possibility frontier
The PPC shows the maximum combined output of two or more products a firm or an entire economy can
Purpose of a 'PPC' produce with its scarce resources when all resources are fully and efficiently employed




A, B, C: efficient use of resources X (point under the PPC): inefficient use of resources Y (point beyond the
What is A, B, C, X, Y? PPC): currently unattainable, given the current level of FoP
Fully/not fully utilising the maximum amount of FoP as efficiently as possible
X: increase total output of both products
Y:
improve quality of existing resources
Correction of X and Y increase quantity of resources it employs
What causes the movement along PPCs? The reallocation of resources from the production of one product to another.
Definition of 'economy' any area in which the economic activities of production, exchange, and consumption take place




Currently, there are 200 units of bags and 50 units of shoes being produced per day. To move from D to E, the
firm reallocates the factors of production from the production of bags to the production of shoes, now 70 units of
Describe the movement from D to E in this bags and 150 units of shoes are produced per day, so the opportunity cost of producing 100 more units of shoes
PPC. is the production of 130 units of bags.
(↑ed production capacity=economic growth)
more natural resources discovered
supply of labour ↑
↑ stock of capital equipment
technological advancement→↑efficiency
↑ skills of labour
↑ healthcare
7 causes to PPC shifting outwards ↑ investment in modern business infrastructure
(↓production capacity=reduce economic growth)
depletion of non-renewable resources
supply of labour ↓
capital equipment worn down and not replaced
↓ skills of labour
5 causes of PPC shifting inwards ageing and decaying modern business infrastructure

Reviews from verified buyers

Showing all reviews
2 year ago

4.0

1 reviews

5
0
4
1
3
0
2
0
1
0
Trustworthy reviews on Stuvia

All reviews are made by real Stuvia users after verified purchases.

Get to know the seller

Seller avatar
Reputation scores are based on the amount of documents a seller has sold for a fee and the reviews they have received for those documents. There are three levels: Bronze, Silver and Gold. The better the reputation, the more your can rely on the quality of the sellers work.
studynotesthx Clifton College
Follow You need to be logged in order to follow users or courses
Sold
14
Member since
2 year
Number of followers
5
Documents
32
Last sold
2 months ago
GCSE, A Level, Medicine Summary Notes

I study in a private school in Bristol. I have achieved 10 ‘9’s and 1 ‘8’ (in Spanish GCSE) for my GCSEs, 3A*s for my A-Levels (Chemistry, Biology and Maths), and an A* for my EPQ. I achieved 3190 Band1 in my UCAT and received 4 Medicine offers from Imperial College London, Kings College London, University of Bristol and University of Sheffield. I am heading to Imperial College London to study Medicine. For GCSE, I mainly sell English Literature, English Language, Geography, and Economics notes. For A Levels, I sell comprehensive mark-scheme specific Anki flash cards and summary notes for Chemistry and Biology. My resources have helped me achieve more than 90% in the tests and exams of my subjects. Finally, I sell Medicine related notes which are useful for CV building. Here were my exam boards for GCSEs and ALevels Edexcel IGCSE English Language, Edexcel IGCSE English Literature, Edexcel IGCSE Higher Mathematics, AQA Level 2 Further Maths, AQA Triple Sciences (Higher Tier) -Physics, Chemistry, Biology, Edexcel IGCSE Geography, CIE IGCSE Economics, CIE IGCSE Physical Education, Edexcel IGCSE Higher Spanish. Edexcel SNAB A A Level Biology, Edexcel A Level Mathematics, OCR A A Level Chemistry

Read more Read less
4.3

3 reviews

5
1
4
2
3
0
2
0
1
0

Recently viewed by you

Why students choose Stuvia

Created by fellow students, verified by reviews

Quality you can trust: written by students who passed their tests and reviewed by others who've used these notes.

Didn't get what you expected? Choose another document

No worries! You can instantly pick a different document that better fits what you're looking for.

Pay as you like, start learning right away

No subscription, no commitments. Pay the way you're used to via credit card and download your PDF document instantly.

Student with book image

“Bought, downloaded, and aced it. It really can be that simple.”

Alisha Student

Frequently asked questions