Economics 101

The ASI is committed to educating the next generation on the merits of a free society and free economy. Through our engagement with schools across the UK, we work to foster an appreciation and a passion for economics. By explaining the basics of economics, we can help students better understand the world around them and become engaged members of society.


Here you’ll find some of our educational resources targeted at UK school children, from informational videos to lesson plans. Covering foundational economic concepts, these resources can be used to compliment or supplement the UK curriculum. While they’re aimed at students, anyone with a budding interest in economics can enjoy them!

Value

What is value? How do we determine the price of objects? What happens if one person values something more than someone else? The conclusion is that value lies in the mind, not in the object, and because we value things differently, we are able to trade and exchange, creating wealth. There are no “fair prices,” only ones that people are prepared to pay.

Inequality

Is inequality always a function of economic growth? Economist Simon Kuznets theorised that as countries became richer inequality would initially increase as workers move from agriculture to industrial production. However, this effect will only be temporary. After a certain point inequality will begin to decrease as the increase in wealth will facilitate government spending on social programs.

Comparative Advantage

Comparative advantage is a theory which states that nations should produce what they are best at. For example, it makes sense for the Scottish to buy French wine, as they produce wine to a higher quality for a lower price. Equally, it makes sense for the French to buy whisky from Scotland.

Wealth

Those who suppose that total wealth is in fixed supply will necessarily suppose that some people are poor because others are rich. The reality is that wealth is continuously created, for example, the total wealth in the world today is far greater than it was at the start of the Industrial Revolution. When one country grows rich it is not necessarily at the expense of another.

Self-sufficiency

National self sufficiency may appear to be a positive thing, as it ensures that a country is not reliant on another. However, a far higher standard of living can be achieved when countries focus on the goods which they are the best at producing, and buying the rest from other countries. By trying to produce everything we deny ourselves access to specialisation, which allows goods to be produced to a higher standard, for a lower cost.

Protectionism

Protectionism is a form of government intervention which aims to protect domestic producers from foreign competition. This can have a variety of negative effects, including placing higher costs on consumers, creating government dependent industries and risking retaliation.

Taxation

There is a continued debate between those who favour low taxation because it allows people to spend money on their priorities, and those who favor high taxation because it brings in money that can be spent on public services such as roads, education and healthcare. In a democracy, the balance between these conflicting views is determined by what people vote for.

Employment

Often reducing unemployment is seen as a principle economic objective, it reduces dependency on the state and increases tax revenue. However, this misses the key point that employment is only valuable as long as it is producing goods and services. It would be possible to achieve full employment by putting half the workforce out to dig holes, and the other half out to fill them up, but no value would be generated.

Innovation

Innovation is what creates economic progress, and makes us richer. It enables us to get more out of the resources which are available. While established industries and professions often oppose innovation, it the long run, it improves the standard of living of the general public.

Student A-level Economics resources

Below are a set of student educational resources on a mix of A level topics. These can be used to supplement learning done in class as further sets of notes, or additional learning resources.

Macro

Micro

  • The problem of scarcity

  • Impact of changes in scarcity on the distribution of resources

  • Explanation of opportunity cost using the Production-possibility frontier diagram (PPF)

  • Explanation of the Zero-sum fallacy: the concept that in a free market, wealth is fixed, so one’s gain is at the expense of another’s loss

  • Examples of Zero-sum games

  • The significancy of the Zero-sum fallacy in economics

  • Explanation of the Laffer curve with the diagram

  • Criticisms of the Laffer curve

  • Essays in which the Laffer curve can be used

  • Explanation of the comparative advantage model

  • Assumptions of comparative advantage

  • Evaluation: Dutch disease, infant industries, hysteresis and structural unemployment

  • Definitions of innovation, invention and creative destruction

  • Arguments against creative destruction: hysteresis, regional unemployment and structural unemployment

  • Technological change and its impact on the economy

  • Definitions of trade creation and free trade

  • The trade creation diagram with analysis

  • Benefits and costs associated with trade

  • Trade based essay evaluations

  • Explanation of the demand for labour (MRPL) and the perfect competition diagram

  • The effect of changing labour supply and demand on wages

  • Factors influencing the demand and supply of labour

  • Definition of protectionism

  • Arguments in support: infant industries, strategic industries and public choice theory

  • Protectionism diagrams and analysis

  • Problems/evaluation of protectionism

  • Explanation of the Kuznets curve theory and its diagram

Teacher Resources

Below are lesson plans and teaching resources on a mix of A level economics topics. These should be used in conjunction with the classroom activities provided, which will help create an engaging and interactive classroom experience.

Classroom Activities

Below are various classroom activities covering A level economics topics. These should be used in conjunction with the teacher lesson plans found above.

Protectionism

Trade

Zero Sum Fallacy

Extracts examining countries including Australia, the USA, Japan and the UK, to help students understand the reasoning behind protectionist policies, including the infant industry argument and Prebisch-Singer hypothesis.

Extracts examining countries including China, the UK, Bangladesh and Cote D’Ivoire, to help students understand the advantages and disadvantages of trade. 

Examines immigration in the US, helping students understand the zero-sum fallacy; the concept that in a free market, wealth is fixed, so that if someone gains more of it, it must be at the expense of someone else having less.

Kuznets Curve

Extracts examining countries including Canada, Scandinavia and Zambia, to help students understand the pattern between inequality and economic growth.

Laffer Curve

Extracts on Presidents Ronald Reagan and Herbert Hoover and their application of the Laffer curve. Aimed to help students understand the relationship between the rate of tax and total tax revenue the government receives.