Just to add 2 more, the business cycle (Booms and recessions) and the PPF graphs (in regards to the environmental sustainability chapter about use of resources)here is a list but not the actual diagrams, anything in bold is not really required but can help to supe up your responses
Topic 1/2
-Overall world supply diagram
-Tariff
-Quota
-Subsidy
-Exchange rate diagram (float + fixed, including shifts in D and S)
-J-curve diagram
Topic 3/4
-Keynesian Cross Model (also called income-expenditure model)
-AD/AS Model (shows growth, unemployment, inflation - the main macro diagram)
-AD/AS Model with SRAS and LRAS, showing output gap
-Phillips curve
-Friedman-Phelps Expectations Augmented Phillips Curve (great for NAIRU plus any question mentioning employment or inflation)
-Lorenz Curve
-Market failure
-Cash rate (in relation to inflation + monetary policy, remember that supply is perfectly inelastic in this model so it is a vertical line)
think I've got them all (at least from my memory), but someone will probably be able to come up with another one
inb4 mreditor and ekman
Thought about the business cycle, that would be a wavy line though and I thought it is advised not to do those and just do stuff with rulers (e.g. How we don't draw the AS and AD model or Phillips curve in a non-linear way)Just to add 2 more, the business cycle (Booms and recessions) and the PPF graphs (in regards to the environmental sustainability chapter about use of resources)
Refer to page 173 in the Dixon if you have it, because it uses the business cycle to describe the changes and volatility of economic growth. I used it as a buildup for economic growth in my latest essay task and I wasn't penalised for it.Thought about the business cycle, that would be a wavy line though and I thought it is advised not to do those and just do stuff with rulers (e.g. How we don't draw the AS and AD model or Phillips curve in a non-linear way)
PPF definitely a good idea, even for topic 1
Yeah sounds goodRefer to page 173 in the Dixon if you have it, because it uses the business cycle to describe the changes and volatility of economic growth. I used it as a buildup for economic growth in my latest essay task and I wasn't penalised for it.
Just sounds like the graph of the life cycle hypothesis, don't know if there's a proper name for it. That reminds me of all those graphs like LRAC etc, but barely any of the prelim graphs are at all relevant. I can't think where you would use the life cycle graph in HSC unless you were arguing that we should focus tax cuts on the working aged population because they tend to dissave. Maybe at a real stretch you could use it for inequality between age groups? Can't even remember what we used it for in prelim though.What's the graph called that illustrates the change in income levels over an individual's lifetime? I remember it being in the y11 textbook.
Surprise!inb4 mreditor and ekman