Singapore · MOE Syllabus Outcomes
Secondary 4 Economics
This course introduces students to the fundamental economic problem of limited resources versus unlimited wants. Students analyze how individuals, firms, and governments make decisions through the lens of opportunity cost, market mechanisms, and national policy interventions.

01The Economic Problem and Decision Making
Explores the core concepts of scarcity, choice, and opportunity cost as the foundation of all economic reasoning.
Investigating how the conflict between finite resources and infinite wants forces agents to make trade-offs.
Deepening the understanding of opportunity cost as the value of the next best alternative forgone.
Using graphical models to illustrate the concepts of efficiency, growth, and opportunity cost.
Examining how technological advancements and resource changes shift the Production Possibility Curve.
Comparing how market, planned, and mixed economies allocate resources differently.
Exploring the characteristics of planned economies and the blend of market and command in mixed systems.
Identifying and understanding the four factors of production: land, labor, capital, and entrepreneurship.
Introducing the concept of rational choice and marginal analysis in economic decision-making.

02Price Signals and Market Equilibrium
Focuses on how the forces of demand and supply interact to determine prices and allocate resources in a market.
Analyzing the factors that influence consumer willingness to buy and producer willingness to sell.
Understanding the direct relationship between price and quantity supplied and its determinants.
Examining how markets clear and the consequences of price ceilings and floors.
Understanding the causes and effects of prices being above or below equilibrium.
Exploring why consumer demand for some goods changes a lot with price, while for others it changes little, without complex calculations.
Understanding why producers can quickly change the quantity supplied for some goods but not others, without complex calculations.
Investigating how changes in consumer income and the prices of related goods (substitutes and complements) affect demand.
Examining the effects of price ceilings and price floors on market outcomes.
Understanding how indirect taxes and subsidies impact market prices and quantities.

03Market Failure and Government Intervention
Analyzing why markets sometimes fail to allocate resources efficiently and how policies attempt to correct these failures.
Identifying and discussing the unintended negative consequences of production and consumption on society and the environment.
Identifying and discussing the unintended positive consequences of production and consumption that benefit society.
Distinguishing between goods that can be used by many people without diminishing others' enjoyment and those that are for individual use.
Exploring goods and services that society generally wants more of (like education) or less of (like smoking), and why.
Understanding why having enough information is important for buyers and sellers to make good decisions in a market.
Understanding why competition among businesses is good for consumers and the economy.
Examining how market outcomes can lead to an unequal distribution of income and wealth.

04Macroeconomic Indicators and Performance
Measuring the health of a national economy through growth, inflation, and employment metrics.
Introducing the idea of a country's total economic output and how it reflects economic activity.
Exploring the determinants of long-run economic growth, including investment and productivity.
Analyzing the causes and consequences of changes in the general price level.
Understanding the effects of sustained price changes on different economic agents.
Investigating different types of unemployment and their impact on society.
Understanding that economies experience periods of growth and slowdown, and how this affects people.
Exploring the main factors that influence the total amount of goods and services demanded and supplied in an economy.

05Macroeconomic Policy and Management
Evaluating how governments use fiscal, monetary, and supply side policies to achieve economic goals.
Examining how governments can increase their spending or reduce taxes to encourage more economic activity.
Understanding how governments can adjust spending or taxes to manage inflation and the national debt.
Introducing the role of a central bank (like MAS in Singapore) in influencing interest rates and the economy.
Understanding the goals and challenges faced by central banks when trying to keep the economy stable.
Exploring government policies aimed at making the economy more efficient and innovative in the long run.
Evaluating the benefits and potential drawbacks of policies designed to improve an economy's long-term productive capacity.
Understanding that governments often have multiple economic goals (e.g., growth, low inflation, low unemployment) and sometimes these goals conflict.

06International Trade and Globalisation
Exploring why nations trade and the economic implications of living in an interconnected world.
Understanding the basic reasons why countries choose to produce certain goods and services and trade them with others.
Analyzing the overall gains from trade and the potential negative impacts on domestic industries.
Exploring common arguments for why a country might want to restrict international trade.
Understanding different methods countries use to restrict trade and their basic economic consequences.
Understanding the basic factors that cause the value of one country's currency to change relative to another's.
Exploring how a stronger or weaker currency can impact a country's exports and imports.
Understanding that countries keep track of all their economic transactions with the rest of the world.
Exploring the increasing interconnectedness of economies worldwide.