HKDSE · Exam Tips

Economics Exam Tips

Mastering HKDSE Economics requires precision in both graphical illustration and rigorous conceptual application. This guide targets the exact criteria examiners look for, from the Alchian-Allen effect to the short-run and long-run aggregate supply dynamics, helping you secure every mark on Paper 1 and 2.

4 min readUpdated: Jun 21, 2026

Exam at a Glance

Papers
2
Total Marks
165
Time Limit
3h 30min
Question Types
4
PaperDurationMarksQuestionsWeightingQuestion Types
Paper 1 (Multiple Choice)1h454530%Multiple Choice (Paper 1)
Paper 2 (Written)2h 30min1201270%Short Questions (Paper 2 Section A), Structured Questions (Paper 2 Section B), Elective Questions (Paper 2 Section C)
Grade Scale
5**5*54321U
Calculator Policy

Use only calculators on the HKEAA Approved List, bearing the 'H.K.E.A.A. APPROVED' (or older 'H.K.E.A. APPROVED') label. Programmable scientific models (e.g. Casio fx-50FH II, fx-3650P II) are allowed, and you MAY keep your own formulas/programs stored in memory — HKDSE does not require you to clear it. Graphic-display (graphing) and CAS/symbolic calculators are not on the approved list and must not be used.

  • AO1: AO1: Recall and understand economic facts, concepts, theories and principles. (30%)
  • AO2: AO2: Apply economic analysis to real-world issues. (45%)
  • AO3: AO3: Evaluate economic policies, arguments, proposals and practical issues. (25%)

Built from real past papers and marking schemes (2021–2025).

Tips & Strategies

1. The 5-Minute Habit That Saves a Grade: Decoding Command Words

In HKDSE Economics, losing marks rarely stems from a lack of studying. Instead, candidates frequently fall victim to a misalignment between their answer structure and the examiner's command words. Every mark allocated to a written question represents a specific step in economic logic. Before writing, spend 30 seconds circling the command words: Explain, Illustrate, State, or Suggest.

  • 'Explain': Never just state a fact. You must establish a complete causal chain. If a question asks you to explain why total expenditure falls under inelastic demand when prices drop, you must explicitly state that the percentage decrease in price is greater than the percentage increase in quantity demanded, leading to a fall in total expenditure. Omitting the comparison of relative percentage changes is a guaranteed way to lose 1 to 2 marks.
  • 'Illustrate with the aid of a diagram': This command requires a dual approach. Your written explanation and your diagram must mirror each other. If you shift a curve in your diagram, your text must explicitly state the reason for the shift (e.g., changes in cost, income, or preferences) and describe the final equilibrium price and quantity.

2. Shifting without Shivering: The Golden Rules of Diagrams

Diagrams are the bedrock of Paper 2, carrying up to 30% of the total written marks. HKEAA examiners are notoriously strict regarding diagram accuracy. Top scorers adhere to three non-negotiable rules:

  1. Label Every Axis and Curve: Standard labels must be exact. In microeconomics, use 'Price ($)' and 'Quantity (Units)'. In macroeconomics, use 'Price Level' and 'Aggregate Output / Real GDP'. Leaving axes unlabeled or using non-standard abbreviations (like 'P' and 'Q' without context in highly formal questions) invites unnecessary deductions.
  2. Never Omit Shift Arrows: Always draw a clear horizontal arrow showing the direction of your curve shifts (e.g., from \( S_0 \) to \( S_1 \), or \( AD_0 \) to \( AD_1 \)). If you are showing a price ceiling or tariff impact, use arrows to indicate the resulting shortage, surplus, or tax revenue changes.
  3. Pinpoint the New Equilibrium: Clearly mark the initial equilibrium point (e.g., \( E_0 \)) and the subsequent equilibrium point (e.g., \( E_1 \)). If a quota is introduced, show the kinked supply curve clearly by darkening the legal supply path.

3. Where the Marks Really Hide: Short-Run vs. Long-Run Essays

The structured 14-mark essay in Section B is where the highest concentration of marks is lost. A common pitfall is the failure to distinguish between short-run (SR) and long-run (LR) macroeconomic impacts. When evaluating policies like childcare subsidies (Strategy I) versus importing labor (Strategy II):

  • Short-Run Analysis: Cash incentives drive up government expenditure instantly. Parents choosing to stay home to raise kids might initially contract the labor supply, decreasing SRAS. Conversely, importing workers immediately expands the active labor force, shifting SRAS rightward and boosting real output.
  • Long-Run Analysis: As children grow up and enter the labor market, LRAS shifts rightward, permanently raising potential output. Importing workers, if temporary, might not exert the same permanent expansionary shift on LRAS if they return home.

Always structure your comparative policy essays with separate paragraphs for each dimension requested (e.g., price level, equity, trade balance) to ensure you do not miss a single sub-objective.

4. Money, Multipliers, and Misconceptions: The Macro Traps

Macroeconomics contains several highly abstract concepts where candidates frequently slip up. Pay close attention to these high-risk areas:

Concept / ScenarioThe Common TrapThe High-Scoring Fix
Government Consumption (G) vs. Transfer PaymentsClassifying electronic consumption vouchers as G.Vouchers are transfer payments. They are excluded from GDP calculations directly and only affect GDP when private consumers spend them (C).
Quantity Theory of Money (QTM)Explaining price level changes using \( MV = PY \) without stating assumptions.You must explicitly assume that velocity (V) and real output (Y) are constant in the short run to conclude that a change in money supply (M) causes a proportional change in price level (P).
Balance of Payments (BOP)Classifying remittances by imported workers under the trade balance (goods/services).Imported labor remittances represent a flow of unilateral funds without reciprocal goods/services, which falls under the current transfer component of the Current Account.

5. Revision Hacks: The Alchian-Allen Effect and Elasticity

To secure a 5** in Paper 1, you must master the Alchian-Allen effect (colloquially known as 'shipping the good apples out'). When a fixed charge (e.g., transportation costs or fixed ticketing surcharges) is added to both high-quality and low-quality goods, the *relative price* of the high-quality good falls. Consequently, the proportion of high-quality goods consumed increases. When explaining this, do not just focus on absolute price drops; always perform the mathematical ratio comparison: \( P_{high} / P_{low} \) after the fixed surcharge.

For elasticity, remember that the effect of a price change on total expenditure depends entirely on price elasticity of demand. If demand is elastic (\( E_d > 1 \)), price and total expenditure move in opposite directions. If inelastic (\( E_d < 1 \)), they move in the same direction. Memorize this relationship and practice drawing matching revenue shading diagrams to visualize the gains and losses in producer revenue.

Calculator Programs

Percentage Change

Casio fx-50FH II / fx-3650P II (HKEAA-approved programmable)

Purpose: \(\%\Delta=\dfrac{\text{new}-\text{old}}{\text{old}}\times100\).

When to use it: Growth rates, inflation, and changes in price/quantity.

Steps
Prompt old, new; outputs the % change.
Program
?→O:?→N:(N-O)÷O×100

Exam note: A negative result means a fall.

Price Elasticity of Demand

Casio fx-50FH II / fx-3650P II (HKEAA-approved programmable)

Purpose: \(\text{PED}=\dfrac{\%\Delta Q}{\%\Delta P}\).

When to use it: Judging elastic (>1) vs inelastic (<1) demand.

Steps
Prompt %ΔQ, %ΔP; outputs PED (use magnitude).
Program
?→Q:?→P:Q÷P

Exam note: Usually quoted as a magnitude; demand PED is normally negative.

Common Mistakes

  1. 1highMarks at stake: 2Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost

    Defining 'CuMask' or other government-distributed items as 'free goods' because citizens receive them for free.

    How to avoid it: Define 'free goods' strictly by opportunity cost: a good is a free good only if its production/consumption involves zero opportunity cost. Government-distributed items are 'scarce resources' and carry high opportunity costs, thus they are 'economic goods' distributed free of charge.
  2. 2highMarks at stake: 2National income

    Confusing Consumption Vouchers with Government Consumption Expenditure (G) in GDP expenditure-approach calculations.

    How to avoid it: Clarify that consumption vouchers are 'transfer payments' and are excluded from G. They only enter GDP when spent by individuals, at which point they are counted as Private Consumption Expenditure (C).
  3. 3mediumMarks at stake: 4Money demand, money supply and interest rate determination

    Explaining changes in price level using the Quantity Theory of Money (QTM) formula (MV = PY) without explicitly stating the required constant assumptions.

    How to avoid it: Always state explicitly that both the velocity of circulation (V) and real output (Y) are assumed to be constant in the short run (percentage change of V and Y = 0) before showing that a change in M leads to a proportional change in P.
  4. 4highMarks at stake: 3The determination of level of output and price

    In Aggregate Demand-Aggregate Supply (AD-AS) diagrams, failing to label axes correctly or missing arrows showing curve shifts.

    How to avoid it: Label the vertical axis as 'Price Level' (not Price) and horizontal axis as 'Aggregate Output' or 'Real GDP' (not Quantity). Ensure clear directional arrows are drawn on shifted curves and new equilibrium points (e.g. E0 to E1) are explicitly labeled.
  5. 5mediumMarks at stake: 4The determination of level of output and price

    Stating that a natural disaster only shifts Aggregate Supply (AS) without recognizing its simultaneous negative impact on Aggregate Demand (AD).

    How to avoid it: Explain that factory closures and infrastructure destruction shift SRAS leftward, while massive job losses, income reductions, and business pessimism simultaneously shift AD leftward.
  6. 6highMarks at stake: 2Price elasticity of demand and supply

    Failing to compare relative percentage changes when explaining why total expenditure falls under inelastic demand when price decreases.

    How to avoid it: State explicitly that under inelastic demand, the percentage decrease in price is greater than the percentage increase in quantity demanded, which leads to a decrease in total consumer expenditure.

Turn these tips into top grades

thinka turns your weak spots into targeted practice, with instant marking and exam-style feedback. Study smarter, not longer.

Practise real exam questions with instant AI feedback and marking.

Start Practising Free