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Which option gives the strongest AQA Economics reasoning for Production, costs and revenue? Variation 1: Explain AQA section 3.1.4.8 Technological change.

Try the question, check the answer, then read the explanation to understand the curriculum point.

At a glance

MCQ

Type

practice

Style

Topic

Individuals, firms, markets and market failure

Exam-style question

Try this first

Which option gives the strongest AQA Economics reasoning for Production, costs and revenue? Variation 1: Explain AQA section 3.1.4.8 Technological change.

  1. A.Define production costs and revenue, apply it to the market context, explain the cause, transmission mechanism and effect, then judge why the result depends on context.
  2. B.Government intervention always removes market failure with no trade-off.
  3. C.A tax shifts demand rather than affecting supply incentives and costs.
  4. D.Give a definition of production costs and revenue only, without application, chain of analysis, evaluation or judgement.

Model answer

What a good answer should say

  • 3.1.4.8 Technological Change.
  • MCQ 1: The correct answer is Define production costs and revenue, apply it to the market context, explain the cause, transmission mechanism and effect, then judge why the result depends on context...
  • This choice fits the microeconomic market analysis required by the learning objective.

Explanation

Why this works

is tested here through the prompt: "Which option gives the strongest AQA Economics reasoning for Production, costs and revenue? Variation 1: Explain AQA".

The correct option is "The correct answer is Define production costs and revenue, apply it to the market context, explain the cause, transmission mechanism and effect, then judge why the result depends on context.." because it keeps the answer anchored to Technological Change. rather than a nearby misconception.

The reasoning chain is: define the concept, apply it to Individuals, firms, markets and market failure, identify the economic mechanism, and check the consequence against consumer surplus, producer incentives, efficiency and equity. A tempting distractor usually confuses a change in demand with quantity demanded, analysis with evaluation, or a short-run effect with a long-run judgement.

For AQA Economics 7136, the best choice is the one that preserves the cause, transmission mechanism and consequence without adding an unsupported policy claim.

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