GCSE Economics Revision
Topic-by-topic revision for Economics, with worked examples, exam-style questions and practice. Choose a topic below to get started.
At a glance
- What this page is
- Topic map for GCSE Economics on StudyVector—jump into groups and topics for revision and practice.
- Who it’s for
- Students sitting GCSE Economics with exam-style questions and explanations.
- Exam boards
- Content is aligned to major UK boards (AQA, Edexcel, OCR, WJEC, Eduqas, CCEA, Cambridge International (CIE), SQA, IB, AP); choose your specification in the app.
- Exams & admissions
- This hub is GCSE/A-Level focused. Admissions tests (UCAT, STEP, etc.) have a separate hub. Admissions hub
- Free plan
- You can start on the free tier (3 days uncapped, then 30 min practice/day) and upgrade for unlimited practice and full features. Pricing
- What makes it different
- Weak-topic routing and next-best question selection—not a static PDF or generic chat.
Board-specific revision
Economics
Curated launch topics
Start with the strongest GCSE Economics topic pages
High-intent GCSE Economics pages built around market reasoning, business costs, government action, and the decision chains students most often need to explain clearly. These are the topic pages we are shaping first for search-led students and fast onboarding into practice.
Microeconomics
Economic problem & economic reasoning
Turn scarcity, choice, and opportunity cost into clear chains of reasoning rather than isolated definitions.
Microeconomics
Production, costs, revenue & profit
Keep business calculations tied to decision-making so cost and profit questions stop feeling like detached arithmetic.
Microeconomics
Markets & prices
Use demand, supply, equilibrium, and shifts with the right causal language instead of graph narration.
Microeconomics
Market failure
Explain why markets fail and how intervention changes outcomes without falling into slogan-level evaluation.
Macroeconomics & the global economy
Government objectives & policy
Compare inflation, unemployment, growth, and policy trade-offs with stronger judgement about what matters most.