Edexcel A-Level · Exam Tips

Economics B (9EB0) Exam Tips

Comprehensive study and exam-tips package for Pearson Edexcel A Level Economics B (9EB0). Features deep insights into Paper 1, 2, and 3 structures, step-by-step guidance on calculation layouts, and tactical advice on drafting high-scoring 20-mark evaluation essays without dropping easy marks on diagrams or generic conclusions.

4 min readUpdated: Jun 21, 2026

Exam at a Glance

Papers
3
Total Marks
300
Time Limit
6h
Question Types
3
PaperDurationMarksQuestionsWeightingQuestion Types
9EB0/012h1001035%Short Answer / Calculation, Analyse (with Diagram), Discuss, Assess, Evaluate Essay
9EB0/022h1001035%Short Answer / Calculation, Analyse, Discuss, Assess, Evaluate Essay
9EB0/032h100830%Discuss (with calculation), Assess Productivity, Assess Expansion / Exchange Rates, Evaluate Supply-side / Trade Policies, Discuss Finance, Assess Specialisation, Assess Depreciation, Evaluate Trade Blocs
Grade Scale
A*ABCDEU
Calculator Policy

A scientific or graphical calculator that meets JCQ regulations may be used (some GCSE Mathematics and Science papers are non-calculator). Graphical calculators must be set to exam mode; you must clear any stored programs, notes or data before the exam, and the calculator must not be able to retrieve stored text or formulae.

  • AO1: AO1: Demonstrate knowledge of terms/concepts/theories (23%)
  • AO2: AO2: Apply knowledge to a variety of contexts (26%)
  • AO3: AO3: Analyse economic and business issues (26%)
  • AO4: AO4: Evaluate economic and business decisions/policies/proposals (25%)

Built from real past papers and marking schemes (2022–2024).

Tips & Strategies

The 5-Minute Reading Habit That Saves a Grade

Under the high-pressure environment of a two-hour Pearson Edexcel A Level Economics B exam, many students succumb to the temptation of immediately putting pen to paper. In doing so, they miss the critical step of digesting the context. In Economics B, context is everything. Whether you are analyzing a package-holiday operator like TUI or a regional tech-disruption scenario, your responses cannot simply be generic, textbook repetitions. Top scorers dedicate the first 5 minutes to carefully reading the extracts, highlighting key quantitative data (such as percentages, index numbers, and revenue figures), and mapping out how these facts directly link to micro and macro concepts.

Where the Marks Really Hide: The Anatomy of the 20-Marker

The 20-mark evaluation essays in Section B and Section C are the ultimate gatekeepers of your grade. To secure a Level 4 (16–20 marks), your essay must display a highly structured, balanced, and contextualized argument. Here is the formula that top-performing candidates use:

  • The Hook (Introduction): Define the core economic terms with absolute precision. For instance, clearly distinguish between disinflation (a fall in the rate of inflation) and deflation (a sustained decrease in the general price level) or define what constitutes a demerit good.
  • The Analytical Chain (2x Pro Points): Build deep, logical cause-and-effect chains. Use connective phrases such as "This leads to... which consequently results in... meaning that..." to ensure your analysis is unbroken. Always ground this in the case study's data.
  • The Counter-Argument (2x Con/Evaluation Points): Challenge your own analysis. If you've argued that an indirect tax is the best way to curb consumption of a demerit good, evaluate its effectiveness based on the Price Elasticity of Demand (PED). If demand is highly price inelastic, consumers will absorb the tax, rendering the policy less effective in terms of volume reduction, while disproportionately hurting low-income households (regressive effect).
  • The Justified Judgment (Conclusion): Never end an essay with a summary. An examiner already knows what you wrote. Instead, deliver a fresh, weighted judgment that answers: "On what does this depend?" (e.g., the short-run vs. long-run impacts, the scale of government funding, or the reliability of the corporate self-regulation).

Mastering the Math: Don't Lose Easy Calculation Marks

Quantitative skills make up a significant portion of your total mark. On Papers 1, 2, and 3, you will encounter 4-mark and 8-mark calculation and calculation-supported discussion questions. To guarantee full marks:

  1. Always write down the formula first. If you make a simple transcription error on your calculator but have written the correct formula (e.g., \( \text{PED} = \frac{\% \Delta Q_d}{\% \Delta P} \) or \( \text{Operating Profit Margin} = \frac{\text{Operating Profit}}{\text{Revenue}} \times 100 \)), you can still secure intermediate working marks.
  2. Identify the correct units and round precisely. Many candidates lose marks because they omit the percentage symbol (%), currency signs, or fail to round to the exact decimal places requested (typically two decimal places or to the nearest whole number).
  3. Keep track of scale. Do not confuse millions with billions or trillions when processing GDP or market size metrics.

The Diagram Discipline: Axis, Equilibriums, and Shift Indicators

A diagrammatic question is a goldmine for easy marks, but only if executed with disciplined precision. Examiners frequently report that students lose 2 out of 4 or 6 marks simply due to careless omissions. Every time you draw a demand and supply or AD/AS diagram, conduct this quick 4-point checklist:

  • Axes: Are they fully and correctly labeled? (Price and Quantity for micro; Price Level and Real GDP/Y for macro).
  • Equilibriums: Are the original equilibrium points fully dashed and labeled to the axes (e.g., \( P \) and \( Q \) or \( P_1 \) and \( Y_1 \))?
  • Shifts: Is the shift in the correct direction? Show arrows indicating the direction of movement of the curves.
  • New Equilibrium: Label the new intersection explicitly (e.g., \( P_1 \) and \( Q_1 \) or \( P_2 \) and \( Y_2 \)).

What Top Scorers Do Differently during Study and Exam Day

Top scorers treat Economics B as a cohesive, living ecosystem. They don't study business topics and macroeconomics in isolated silos; they actively look for the feedback loops between them. For example, when studying productivity, they immediately connect firm-level efficiency (e.g., JIT stock management or automated AI processes) to macro indicators such as international competitiveness, regional employment structures, and aggregate demand. During the exam, they manage their time with ruthless discipline: approximately 1.2 minutes per mark. If a question is worth 10 marks, they spend no more than 12 minutes on it, protecting the vital time needed to structure and write their 20-mark evaluative conclusions.

Calculator Programs

Graph: zeros, intersections & turning points

Graphical calculator / GDC (exam mode)

Purpose: Plot a function to read its roots (zeros), points of intersection, and maxima/minima.

When to use it: Checking solutions, sketching, or solving where an analytic method is hard.

Steps
Graph the function(s) and use the built-in zero, intersect and maximum/minimum tools.

Exam note: Allowed under JCQ rules, but you must still show your method — an unsupported calculator answer earns no method marks. Clear all stored programs, notes and data (graphical calculators in exam mode) before the exam.

Numerical equation solver

Graphical calculator / GDC (exam mode)

Purpose: Solve an equation or find a variable numerically when an algebraic route is long or implicit.

When to use it: Iterative or implicit equations, or to confirm an algebraic solution.

Steps
Use the equation/zero solver, entering the equation and a sensible starting estimate.

Exam note: Allowed under JCQ rules, but you must still show your method — an unsupported calculator answer earns no method marks. Clear all stored programs, notes and data (graphical calculators in exam mode) before the exam.

Numerical integration & differentiation

Graphical calculator / GDC (exam mode)

Purpose: Evaluate a definite integral \(\int_a^b f(x)\,dx\) or a gradient \(f'(x)\) at a point.

When to use it: Checking calculus answers, or where only a numerical value is needed.

Steps
Use the GDC's numeric integral / derivative function with the limits or the point.

Exam note: Allowed under JCQ rules, but you must still show your method — an unsupported calculator answer earns no method marks. Clear all stored programs, notes and data (graphical calculators in exam mode) before the exam.

Statistics & probability distributions

Graphical calculator / GDC (exam mode)

Purpose: 1-var/2-var statistics, linear regression, and cumulative binomial / normal / Poisson probabilities without tables.

When to use it: Statistics questions and hypothesis tests.

Steps
Enter data in the statistics editor, or use the distribution menu (binomial cdf, normal cdf, …).

Exam note: Allowed under JCQ rules, but you must still show your method — an unsupported calculator answer earns no method marks. Clear all stored programs, notes and data (graphical calculators in exam mode) before the exam.

Common Mistakes

  1. 1highMarks at stake: 2Price determination

    Drawing supply and demand diagrams with missing axes labels, missing equilibrium lines, or reversed shift indicators (e.g. showing a supply shift instead of a demand shift when restrictions are lifted).

    How to avoid it: Always label your axes (Price and Quantity for micro, Price Level and Real GDP for macro), draw dashed lines connecting equilibriums to the axes, and include arrows showing the direction of the curve shift.
  2. 2highMarks at stake: 6The wider economic environment

    Treating long-form evaluation essays as generic textbook summaries without applying details from the provided case studies.

    How to avoid it: Integrate specific data points, dates, company names, or macroeconomic events directly from the text to anchor your chains of reasoning into the real-world context.
  3. 3mediumMarks at stake: 4Profit and loss

    Failing to convert mathematical units correctly in quantitative calculation tasks, such as mixing up millions and billions, or omitting necessary units (like % or currency symbols).

    How to avoid it: Write down the full formula first, solve intermediate steps clearly on paper, check the scale of the numbers, and always append the correct symbol (e.g., % or £/$) with the specified decimal rounding.
  4. 4highMarks at stake: 8Arguments for and against regulation

    Writing one-sided arguments in 20-mark evaluation essays without presenting counter-arguments or a final dependent conclusion.

    How to avoid it: Adopt a balanced essay structure: analyze benefits, evaluate constraints or drawbacks, and construct a final judgment that explicitly states 'On what does this depend?'.
  5. 5mediumMarks at stake: 4Inflation

    Confusing deflation (a sustained drop in the general price level) with disinflation (a slowing down of price level growth).

    How to avoid it: Remember that if the Consumer Price Index (CPI) increases but at a lower rate (e.g. from 10% to 5%), it is disinflation. CPI must actually fall (negative rate) for it to be deflation.
  6. 6mediumMarks at stake: 6Exchange rate changes

    Assuming a depreciation of the exchange rate will automatically improve the balance of trade without acknowledging the roles of price elasticity of demand (PED) or the Marshall-Lerner condition.

    How to avoid it: Evaluate the impact by discussing how import/export volumes will change depending on whether demand is price elastic or inelastic in the short-run vs. long-run.

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