Paper 2 (DP IB Economics): Revision Note
What is the structure of Paper 2?
Overview
Paper 2 assesses your ability to apply economic theory to real-world data and information
All questions are based on stimulus material, which may include:
Written text
Tables
Graphs
Diagrams
Extracted data
From May 2024 onwards, the same Paper 2 is sat by both SL and HL students, meaning:
No HL-only content is assessed
All questions are accessible using the common syllabus content
Students must select one question from a choice of two
Time allocation
Total exam time: 1 hour 45 minutes
Suggested time management
A common reason students underperform is overspending time on calculations or diagrams, leaving part (g) rushed or underdeveloped.
Answer subparts in order
Work efficiently through (a)–(f)
Reserve adequate time for part (g)
(This single part accounts for over one-third of the total marks)
Question structure
Each Paper 2 question is divided into seven subparts, labelled (a)–(g)
Total marks per question: 40
Students answer all subparts of the chosen question
Typical breakdown of skills across the question
Early subparts (a–f): Short-response application
These questions typically test:
Definitions of key economic terms
Calculations, using data provided in tables or text
Interpretation of numerical data
Diagrams, including construction and explanation
Short explanations linked directly to the stimulus material
Marks are awarded for precision, not length
Answers must:
Refer explicitly to the relevant text, table, or figure
Use correct economic terminology
Apply theory in context, not in the abstract
Final subpart – Part (g) (15 marks)
Part (g) is the highest-value component of Paper 2 and requires a data-driven evaluative response
Examiners assess how well the student demonstrates:
Understanding of the economic issue raised by the data
Application of relevant economic theory
Explicit and selective use of the stimulus material
Ability to analyse and evaluate policy options, impacts, or trade-offs
A balanced response, often considering:
Short run vs long run
Advantages vs disadvantages
Different stakeholders
A reasoned judgement or conclusion, grounded in the data
Critical examiner expectation for part (g)
Explaining economic theory without using the stimulus material caps marks, regardless of theoretical accuracy
High-scoring responses consistently:
Integrate figures, trends, or statements from the data
Use the data to support analysis, not just illustrate it
Avoid generic, pre-learned essays
Use of diagrams in Paper 2
Diagrams should be used selectively and purposefully.
Only include a diagram when it adds analytical value
Diagrams must be:
Correct
Fully labelled
Clearly explained in words
Diagrams not linked to the data or question will not access higher marks
What examiners are looking for overall
Across the whole paper, examiners reward:
Direct reference to texts, tables, and figures
Accurate calculations and interpretation
Clear linkage between data and theory
Evaluation that is explicitly grounded in the stimulus
Focused answers that address the command term
They penalise:
Generic theory answers
Ignoring data
Overlong explanations that do not add analysis
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