The 90-Minute Blueprint: Where the Marks are Won and Lost
In AQA AS Economics (7135), you face two papers: Paper 1 (Microeconomics) and Paper 2 (Macroeconomics). Each paper is a 90-minute race for 70 marks, and managing your clock is just as critical as knowing your theory. Top scorers divide their time with mathematical precision. You should spend no more than 20 minutes on Section A (20 multiple-choice questions), leaving you exactly 70 minutes for Section B (the 50-mark context study).
In Section B, allocate your time carefully to prevent running out of steam before the big essays:
- Definition (3 marks): 4 minutes
- Calculation (4 marks): 6 minutes
- Data Comparison (4 marks): 8 minutes
- Diagrammatic Drawing (4 marks): 8 minutes
- Explanation Essay (10 marks): 14 minutes
- Evaluation Essay (25 marks): 30 minutes
The 4-Mark Quantitative Traps: Units, Accuracy, and Contrast
Data response questions in Section B contain 8 marks of highly accessible quantitative assessment that many students throw away. To secure these, you must obey two strict rules from the examiners' reports:
1. Never Drop Your Units in Calculations
Whether you are calculating index numbers, mortgage interest changes, or hotel tax rates, the final number is meaningless without its units. If the answer is €25 (like in Paper 1's tourist tax calculation) or £431 (like in Paper 2's mortgage calculation), writing just "25" or "431" will immediately cost you accuracy marks. Always state the exact currency symbol, percentage sign, or index denominator.
2. Comparison Means Direct Contrast, Not Isolated Descriptions
In the 4-mark data comparison question, you are asked to identify two significant features of the data. High-scoring candidates make direct, comparative contrasts between series. For instance, when comparing inflation and wage growth, do not describe inflation from 2021 to 2024 and then describe wage growth in a separate paragraph. Instead, directly contrast them: "In October 2022, inflation peaked at 9.6%, whereas the growth in real earnings was negative at -2.4%." Always back up each comparison with two specific data points (including years and units) to secure full marks.
The Definition Pitfall: Concepts over Formulas
When asked to define an economic concept like Price Elasticity of Demand (PED) or Scarce Resources, candidates frequently make the mistake of simply writing down the mathematical formula (e.g., \( \% \Delta Qd / \% \Delta P \)).
AQA mark schemes explicitly state that a formula alone does not constitute a full conceptual definition. You must explain the underlying economic principle. For PED, define it as: "The responsiveness of the quantity demanded of a product to a change in its price." For scarce resources, define it as: "A finite input or factor of production that is limited in supply relative to its infinite demand."
Visual Perfection: Eliminating Diagram Disasters
Diagrams are worth 4 marks on their own, but accurate diagrams also form the backbone of your 10-mark and 25-mark essays. Examiners repeatedly note three fatal drawing errors:
- Axis Label Confusion: Never use generic 'Price' (P) and 'Quantity' (Q) labels on macroeconomic AD/AS diagrams. You must label the vertical axis as Price Level (PL) and the horizontal axis as Real National Output (Real GDP or Y). Generic labels will cost you the diagram marks.
- Missing Movement Indicators: If showing a reallocation of resources on a Production Possibility Curve (PPC), you must draw a directional arrow along the curve indicating the direction of movement. Without this, your diagram is static and fails to answer the prompt.
- Incorrect Shifts: When showing the impact of an indirect tax change (like a reduction in VAT), remember that indirect taxes are a cost of production. This shifts the Short-Run Aggregate Supply (SRAS) curve, not the Aggregate Demand (AD) curve.
Mastering the 10-Mark Analytical Chain: No Missing Links
The 10-mark 'Explain' questions do not require evaluation, but they demand rigorous, step-by-step logic. Top scorers construct unbroken analytical chains of reasoning.
For example, if explaining how a rise in the Bank Rate reduces inflation, do not jump directly from the rate hike to lower prices. Your chain must be sequential:
- The Bank of England raises the Bank Rate.
- This increases the cost of borrowing and the reward for saving for commercial banks.
- Commercial banks pass this on, raising mortgage and consumer loan interest rates.
- Consumers reduce discretionary spending (C) due to higher mortgage payments, and firms delay investment (I) due to higher borrowing costs.
- Since C and I are components of Aggregate Demand (\( AD = C + I + G + [X - M] \)), the AD curve shifts leftward.
- This reduces demand-pull inflationary pressure, lowering the general price level.
If you miss a single step, your chain is truncated, and your mark is capped.
The 25-Mark Decider: Contextual Evaluation is King
The 25-mark essay represents over a third of the total marks on each paper. Here, generic pre-memorized evaluations fail. To reach Level 5 (21–25 marks), your evaluation must be strictly contextualized using the provided extracts:
- Root Arguments in the Extracts: Use the actual figures and trends from the context (such as regional GDP disparities or commercial drone market growth) to justify your policy suggestions.
- Weigh up Government Failure: When assessing state intervention, balance the theoretical market correction against realistic government failures, administrative costs, and information gaps.
- The 'It Depends On' Framework: Structure your final judgment around critical economic variables. Is the policy effective in the short run but limited by massive time lags in the long run? Does its success depend heavily on the country's fiscal position or the price elasticity of demand for the taxed product?