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Teacher of economics and business across five international schools for last twelve years having spent the 16 years prior employed as a Bank Manager with Lloyds Banking Group (UK) Examiner with CIE - economics (6 years)

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Teacher of economics and business across five international schools for last twelve years having spent the 16 years prior employed as a Bank Manager with Lloyds Banking Group (UK) Examiner with CIE - economics (6 years)
IGCSE Macroeconomics (Units 4 - 6)
mills65mills65

IGCSE Macroeconomics (Units 4 - 6)

17 Resources
4.1 the role of government 4.2 macroeconomic aims of government 4.3 fiscal policy 4.4 monetary policy 4.5 supply-side policy 4.6 economic growth 4.7 employment and unemployment 4.8 inflation and deflation 5.1 living standards 5.2 poverty 5.3 population 5.4 differences in economic development 6.1 international specialisation 6.2 globalisation, free trade and protectionism 6.3 current account of the balance of payments 6.4 foreign exchange rate
6.4 Foreign exchange rates (IGCSE Macroeconomics)
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6.4 Foreign exchange rates (IGCSE Macroeconomics)

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Floating and fixed systems. The demand for and supply of a currency in the foreign exchange market and the determination of the equilibrium foreign exchange rate. Including changes in demand for exports and imports, changes in the rate of interest, speculation, and the entry or departure of MNCs. The effects of foreign exchange rate fluctuations on export and import prices and spending on imports and exports via the PED. The difference between, and the advantages and disadvantages of, a floating foreign exchange rate and a fixed foreign exchange rate system. Questions and suggested solutions
6.3 Current account of the balance of payments (IGCSE Macroeconomics)
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6.3 Current account of the balance of payments (IGCSE Macroeconomics)

(0)
Floating and fixed systems. The demand for and supply of a currency in the foreign exchange market and the determination of the equilibrium foreign exchange rate. Including changes in demand for exports and imports, changes in the rate of interest, speculation, and the entry or departure of MNCs. The effects of foreign exchange rate fluctuations on export and import prices and spending on imports and exports via the PED. The difference between, and the advantages and disadvantages of, a floating foreign exchange rate and a fixed foreign exchange rate system. Questions and suggested solutions
5.3 Population (IGCSE Macroeconomics)
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5.3 Population (IGCSE Macroeconomics)

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Birth rate, death rate, net migration, immigration and emigration. How and why birth rates, death rates and net migration vary between countries. The concept of an optimum population. The effects of increases and decreases in population size and changes in the age and gender distribution of population. Note: interpretation of a population pyramid is required, but drawing is not. Questions and suggested answers
5.2 Poverty (IGCSE Macroeconomics)
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5.2 Poverty (IGCSE Macroeconomics)

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The difference between absolute and relative poverty. The causes of poverty including unemployment, low wages, illness and age. Policies including those promoting economic growth, improved education, more generous state benefits, progressive taxation, and national minimum wage. Questions and suggested answers
5.1 Living Standards (IGCSE Macroeconomics)
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5.1 Living Standards (IGCSE Macroeconomics)

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Real GDP per head and the Human Development Index (HDI). The components of real GDP and HDI. The advantages and disadvantages of real GDP and HDI. Reasons for differences in living standards and income distribution within and between countries. Questions and suggested answers
4.8 Inflation and deflation (IGCSE Macroeconomics)
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4.8 Inflation and deflation (IGCSE Macroeconomics)

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Measurement of inflation and deflation using the Consumer Prices Index (CPI). Causes of inflation: demand-pull and cost-push. Causes of deflation: demand-side and supply-side. The consequences of inflation and deflation for consumers, workers, savers, lenders, firms and the economy as a whole. The range of policies available to control inflation and deflation and how effective they might be. Review of Unit 4 Questions and suggested answers
4.7 Employment and unemployment (IGCSE Macroeconomics)
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4.7 Employment and unemployment (IGCSE Macroeconomics)

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The nature and causes of changes in the pattern of employment, for example increase in proportion of workers employed in the tertiary sector and formal economy as an economy develops; a greater proportion of women in the labour force due to changes in social attitudes; decline in the proportion employed in the public sector as a country moves towards a market economy. How unemployment is measured – claimant count and labour force survey – the formula for the unemployment rate. Frictional, structural and cyclical unemployment. The consequences of unemployment for the individual, firms and the economy as a whole. The range of policies available to reduce unemployment and how effective they might be. Review of Unit 4 Questions and suggested answers
4.6 Economic growth (IGCSE Macroeconomics)
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4.6 Economic growth (IGCSE Macroeconomics)

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Real Gross Domestic Product (GDP) and how it can be used to measure economic growth. GDP per head (capita). Meaning of recession and how a recession moves the economy within its PPC. How changes in total demand may increase the utilisation of resources and GDP resulting in a movement from inside toward the PPC. How economic growth shifts the economy’s PPC to the right and is caused by changes in investment, technology, and the quantity and quality of the factors of production. The costs and benefits of economic growth in the context of different economies. The range of policies available to promote economic growth and how effective they might be. Review of Unit 4 Questions and suggested answers
4.5 Supply-side policy (IGCSE Macroeconomics)
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4.5 Supply-side policy (IGCSE Macroeconomics)

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Possible supply-side policy measures include education and training, labour market reforms, lower direct taxes, deregulation, improving incentives to work and invest, and privatisation. How supply-side policy measures may enable the government to achieve its macroeconomic aims. Review of Unit 4 Questions and suggested answers
4.4 Monetary policy (IGCSE Macroeconomics)
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4.4 Monetary policy (IGCSE Macroeconomics)

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Changes in interest rates, money supply and foreign exchange rates. How monetary policy measures may enable the government to achieve its macroeconomic aims Review of Unit 4 Questions and suggested answers
4.3 Fiscal policy (IGCSE Macroeconomics)
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4.3 Fiscal policy (IGCSE Macroeconomics)

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The main areas of government spending and the reasons for and effects of spending in these areas. Taxation as the main source of government revenue and the reasons for levying taxation. Examples of the different classifications of tax; progressive, regressive, proportional; and direct, indirect. The qualities of a good tax. The impact of taxation on consumers, producers, government and economy as a whole. The tax and spending changes, in the form of fiscal policy, that cause budget balance or imbalance. Including calculations of the size of a budget deficit or surplus. How fiscal policy measures may enable the government to achieve its macroeconomic aims. Note: aggregate demand and aggregate supply are not required. Review of Unit 4 Questions and suggested answers
4.2 The macroeconomic aims of government (IGCSE Macroeconomics)
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4.2 The macroeconomic aims of government (IGCSE Macroeconomics)

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Economic growth, full employment/low unemployment, stable prices/low inflation, balance of payments stability, redistribution of income. Reasons behind the choice of aims and the criteria that governments set for each aim. Possible conflicts between aims: full employment versus stable prices; economic growth versus balance of payments stability; and full employment versus balance of payments stability Review of Unit 4 Questions and suggested answers
3.8 Market structure (IGCSE Microeconomics)
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3.8 Market structure (IGCSE Microeconomics)

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The effect of having a high number of firms on price, quality, choice, profit. Characteristics, advantages and disadvantages of monopoly. *Unit 3 review Note: diagrams are not required. Note: the theory of perfect and imperfect competition and diagrams are not required Questions with suggested solutions