In simple terms
A friendly intro before the formal notes — no formulas yet.
Growing the Economic Pie
Economic growth means a country's real output of goods and services rises over time. It can happen in two ways: by putting idle resources back to work (actual growth) or by increasing the economy's maximum productive capacity (potential growth).
Think of a pizza restaurant. On a quiet night it can serve more pizzas simply by filling its empty tables and firing up ovens that were sitting idle — that is actual growth, using up spare capacity. But once every table is full and every oven is running, the only way to serve more is to buy bigger ovens or open a second branch — that raises the maximum it can ever produce, which is potential growth.
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Economic growth is the percentage increase in real GDP over a period. 'Real' strips out inflation so we measure the true change in the volume of output.
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Actual growth uses up spare capacity: a move from inside the PPC towards it, or a rightward shift of AD/SRAS towards full employment.
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Potential growth expands capacity: an outward shift of the whole PPC, or a rightward shift of LRAS.
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Weigh the consequences: growth can raise living standards and cut unemployment, but may widen inequality, damage the environment and threaten sustainability — and growth is not the same as development.
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Key formulas
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Full topic notes
Formal explanation with the rigour you need for the exam.
What economic growth means: actual vs potential
Economic growth is the percentage increase in a country's real Gross Domestic Product (GDP) over a period, usually a quarter or a year. We use 'real' GDP — output valued at constant prices — so that we measure a genuine rise in the volume of goods and services, not just a rise in prices. Behind that single headline number lie two distinct ideas that you must never conflate.
Actual growth (short-run): an increase in real output the economy actually achieves, typically by taking up the 'slack' — using previously unemployed or under-used resources, or using existing resources more efficiently.
Potential growth (long-run): an increase in the economy's productive capacity — the maximum it could produce at full employment. This requires more or better factors of production, and can exist even if that new capacity is not yet fully used.
Illustrating growth (1): the production possibilities curve
The PPC shows the maximum combinations of two goods an economy can produce when resources are used fully and efficiently with fixed technology. It gives us the cleanest picture of the actual-versus-potential distinction, and the two are shown by completely different movements.
Actual growth on the PPC: a movement from a point INSIDE the curve towards a point ON the curve. Idle resources (e.g. cyclically unemployed workers or factories) are brought into use, so real output rises without the frontier moving.
Potential growth on the PPC: an outward SHIFT of the entire curve. The maximum attainable output has risen because there are now more or better factors of production, so points that were previously beyond the frontier become attainable.
Not the same as a movement ALONG the curve: sliding from one point on the frontier to another shows opportunity cost (more of one good means less of the other), NOT growth. Confusing this with a shift is a classic error.
Illustrating growth (2): the AD/AS diagram
The AD/AS model tells the same story in a second way, and a strong Paper 1 answer can show growth on both diagrams. Here the key is which curve moves.
Actual growth on AD/AS: a rightward shift of AD (e.g. rising consumer confidence or investment) or of SRAS (e.g. lower oil prices) raises real GDP towards the full-employment level. Real output rises, but the economy's potential (LRAS) has not changed.
Potential growth on AD/AS: a rightward shift of the LRAS curve. Full-employment output (Yp) rises, so the economy can sustain a higher real GDP without generating inflation. On a monetarist/new-classical diagram LRAS is vertical at potential output; on a Keynesian diagram it is the horizontal full-capacity output that moves outward.
Putting them together: an outward PPC shift and a rightward LRAS shift are two representations of the SAME event — an increase in productive capacity. Being able to link them is a top-band skill.
Whenever a question says 'economic growth', decide in your first sentence whether you mean actual (short-run) or potential (long-run) growth, then choose the matching diagram move: inside-to-on the PPC / AD or SRAS shift for actual; outward PPC shift / LRAS shift for potential. Label everything — axes, curves, the specific point or shift — and then EXPLAIN in words what the reader is looking at. A labelled diagram that is not explained does not reach the top band.
The causes of economic growth
Potential growth comes down to one idea: increasing the quantity OR improving the quality of the factors of production, so the economy can produce more. Actual growth, by contrast, is mostly about how fully the existing capacity is used. The main causes of potential growth are the following.
More factors of production (quantity): a larger labour force (e.g. through population growth or immigration), the discovery of new natural resources (land), and a growing capital stock all raise capacity.
Better factors of production (quality): improvements in human capital through education, training and healthcare make workers more productive; better-quality capital equipment produces more per machine.
Investment: spending by firms and government on new physical capital — machinery, factories and infrastructure such as roads, ports and broadband — adds to the capital stock and is a central engine of growth.
Technology: technological progress lets the economy produce more output from the same inputs, and is one of the most important long-run drivers of growth.
Productivity: rising output per unit of input (often the result of investment, technology and human-capital gains) means the same resources yield more, shifting LRAS and the PPC outwards.
Institutions and incentives: stable government, secure property rights and a reliable legal system encourage the investment and entrepreneurship that underpin all of the above.
The consequences of economic growth
Growth is a leading policy goal because of its benefits, but a balanced, evaluative answer — the kind that earns higher-order marks — must weigh those benefits against real costs. The effect on economic well-being depends on HOW growth is achieved and WHO gains from it.
Benefits — living standards: higher average real incomes and improved material living standards; lower unemployment as firms hire to meet rising output; higher government tax revenue to fund healthcare, education and merit goods; a route out of poverty for many households.
Costs — inequality: if the gains from growth accrue mainly to owners of capital or high-skilled workers, income and wealth inequality can widen, so average GDP per head rises while many are no better off.
Costs — environment and sustainability: more production and consumption can bring pollution, congestion, and depletion of non-renewable resources; growth that ignores these threatens SUSTAINABILITY — the ability of future generations to meet their own needs.
Costs — inflation and other social costs: demand-driven growth near full capacity can cause demand-pull inflation; rapid change can also bring stress, longer working hours and structural unemployment in declining industries.
Growth is not development: a rising GDP does not guarantee better lives. Development also depends on health, education, equality and the environment — so growth is necessary but not sufficient for improved well-being.
Common mistakes examiners penalise
Confusing actual with potential growth — actual growth uses up spare capacity (inside-to-on the PPC; AD/SRAS shift); potential growth expands capacity (outward PPC shift; LRAS shift). State which you mean.
Showing growth as a movement ALONG the PPC instead of a SHIFT of it — sliding along the frontier shows opportunity cost, not growth. Potential growth is the whole curve moving outward.
Treating an inside-the-PPC point as if it were on the curve — from inside, output can rise with little or no opportunity cost because idle resources are being used; that is actual, not potential, growth.
Confusing causes with consequences — investment, technology and better factors of production are CAUSES; higher living standards, inequality and pollution are CONSEQUENCES. Do not list a cause as an effect.
Equating growth with development — a higher real GDP is not automatically higher well-being; ignoring inequality, the environment and sustainability loses evaluation marks.
Drawing a diagram but not explaining it — an unlabelled or unexplained PPC/AD-AS diagram caps you in a lower band even if it is technically correct.
Key concepts in this lesson
The 2022 course is built around key concepts, and this lesson draws on three: change (growth is the economy's real output changing over time), economic well-being (growth can raise material living standards, but only if its gains are shared and its costs contained), and sustainability (growth that depletes resources or damages the environment may not be maintainable for future generations). Linking a key concept to real-world material is specifically rewarded in the internal assessment, so keep these in view. This content is common to SL and HL at this level.
Worked examples
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The real GDP of Econland was $450 billion in 2022 and $468 billion in 2023. Calculate Econland's rate of economic growth in 2023, and state whether this figure alone tells you if the growth was actual or potential.
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Step 1 — identify the values. Real GDP in 2022 = $450bn; real GDP in 2023 = $468bn.
Using a long-run AD/AS diagram, illustrate and explain how a government policy of large-scale investment in high-speed internet infrastructure might affect economic growth and the average price level.
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Starting point: the economy begins at its long-run equilibrium (Yp1, P1).
Paper 1, part (a): Explain, using a production possibilities curve AND an AD/AS diagram, the difference between actual and potential economic growth. [10 marks]
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Model answer: Economic growth is an increase in real GDP over time, but it takes two forms that must be distinguished. Actual growth is a rise in real output the economy currently achieves by using idle or under-used resources; potential growth is an increase in the economy's productive capacity — the maximum it could produce at full employment — driven by more or better factors of production.
How it all connects
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Glossary
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Quick check
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Revision flashcards
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Economic Growth
An increase in the real output of an economy over time, measured as the percentage change in real Gross Domestic Product (GDP).
Key takeaways
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Actual growth (short-run): an increase in real output the economy actually achieves, typically by taking up the 'slack' — using previously unemployed or under-used resources, or using existing resources more efficiently.
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Potential growth (long-run): an increase in the economy's productive capacity — the maximum it could produce at full employment. This requires more or better factors of production, and can exist even if that new capacity is not yet fully used.
Practice — then mark it
The whole point: a real Cambridge question, marked mark-by-mark.
Get a Paper 1 (a) answer marked: use a PPC and an AD/AS diagram to explain actual vs potential growth
Get a Paper 1 (a) answer marked: use a PPC and an AD/AS diagram to explain actual vs potential growth
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Checkpoint
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Before you move on: do Get a Paper 1 (a) answer marked: use a PPC and an AD/AS diagram to explain actual vs potential growth on paper, snap a photo, and get examiner-style feedback on exactly where you win and lose marks.