Cambridge IGCSE 0455 / 0987

📊 IGCSE Economics Formula Sheet 2026

Quick-reference guide for Cambridge IGCSE Economics students covering micro and macro formulas with real exam context.

Elasticities National Income Costs & Revenue

Our formula sheets are free to download — save this one as PDF for offline revision.

Aligned with the latest 2026 syllabus and board specifications. This sheet is prepared to match your exam board’s official specifications for the 2026 exam series.

All the Core IGCSE Economics Relationships in One Place

Use this curated formula sheet to keep demand, supply, elasticity, national income and cost relationships at your fingertips. Each formula is annotated with exam-ready reminders so you can focus on application during structured and data-response questions.

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Elasticities explained with sign conventions

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Cost and revenue structures for firms

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Macroeconomic performance indicators

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Application tips for Paper 2 data response

Demand, Supply & Elasticities

Remember to attach the sign (+/−) to elasticity calculations in your final answer.

Price Elasticity of Demand (PED)

Measures responsiveness of quantity demanded to a change in price.

PED = (% Δ in quantity demanded) / (% Δ in price)

Expect negative values for majority of goods; report absolute value if asked for magnitude only.

Price Elasticity of Supply (PES)

Measures responsiveness of quantity supplied to a change in price.

PES = (% Δ in quantity supplied) / (% Δ in price)

Income Elasticity of Demand (YED)

Classify goods: positive (>0) for normal goods, negative (<0) for inferior goods.

YED = (% Δ in quantity demanded) / (% Δ in income)

Cross Elasticity of Demand (XED)

Identify substitutes (positive) vs complements (negative).

XED = (% Δ in quantity demanded of good X) / (% Δ in price of good Y)

Midpoint Method (for Δ % calculations)

Use when price/quantity changes are large to avoid asymmetry.

% Δ = ((New − Original) / ((New + Original) / 2)) × 100%

Firm Costs, Revenue & Profit

Always state the time period (short run / long run) when discussing these relationships.

Total, Average and Marginal Revenue

TR total revenue, AR revenue per unit, MR change in revenue from selling one more unit.

Total Revenue (TR)

TR = Price × Quantity

Average Revenue (AR)

AR = TR / Quantity

Marginal Revenue (MR)

MR = ΔTR / ΔQuantity

Cost Structures

TFC fixed costs, TVC variable costs, TC total cost, ATC average total cost, AFC average fixed cost, AVC average variable cost, MC marginal cost (extra cost per unit).

Total Cost (TC)

TC = Total Fixed Cost (TFC) + Total Variable Cost (TVC)

Average Total Cost (ATC)

ATC = TC / Quantity

Average Fixed Cost (AFC)

AFC = TFC / Quantity

Average Variable Cost (AVC)

AVC = TVC / Quantity

Marginal Cost (MC)

MC = ΔTC / ΔQuantity

Profit Relationships

Total Profit

Profit = TR − TC

Average Profit

Average Profit = AR − ATC

Profit Maximisation Rule

MR = MC

Assuming MC is rising after the intersection.

Break-even and Contribution

Contribution compares selling price to variable cost; break-even output is units needed to cover total fixed costs.

Contribution per Unit

Contribution = Price − AVC

Break-even Output

Break-even quantity = TFC / Contribution per unit

National Income & Macroeconomic Indicators

Aggregate Demand (AD)

C = Consumption, I = Investment, G = Government expenditure, X = Exports, M = Imports.

AD = C + I + G + (X − M)

Multiplier Effect

MPC = Marginal Propensity to Consume, MPS = Marginal Propensity to Save.

Simple Multiplier

k = 1 / (1 − MPC) = 1 / MPS

Income Change

ΔY = k × Initial Injection

Inflation Measurements

Use weighted basket costs; express price changes as percentages relative to base year.

Price Index

Price Index = (Current basket cost / Base year basket cost) × 100

Inflation Rate

Inflation (%) = ((Current index − Previous index) / Previous index) × 100

Balance of Payments

Current Account Balance

Current Account = (X − M) + Net primary income + Net secondary income

Unemployment Rate

Labour force includes everyone employed or actively seeking work.

Unemployment (%) = (Number of unemployed / Labour force) × 100

Indices, Growth & Development Metrics

GDP Growth Rate

Positive value shows expansion; use real (inflation-adjusted) GDP figures.

GDP Growth (%) = ((Real GDP this year − Real GDP last year) / Real GDP last year) × 100

Real vs Nominal GDP

Use an index where base year = 100.

Real GDP = (Nominal GDP / Price Index) × 100

GDP per Capita

Compare using real GDP to account for inflation; population measured mid-year.

GDP per capita = Total GDP / Population

Terms of Trade

Index above 100 indicates export prices relatively higher; track changes to discuss improvements or deteriorations.

Terms of Trade = (Average export price index / Average import price index) × 100

Human Development Index (conceptual)

HDI combines life expectancy, education index, and GNI per capita index.

No calculation required for IGCSE, but know the three components.

How to Use This Formula Sheet

Boost your Cambridge exam confidence with these proven study strategies from our tutoring experts.

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Annotate Data Responsibly

When using formulas in Paper 2, write the formula first, show substitution with data from the extract, then present the final value with correct units.

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Link Concept Chains

Pair each formula with the theory it belongs to (e.g., PED with revenue implications) to strengthen your evaluation marks.

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Practice Timed Calculations

Spend 5 minutes daily re-working past-paper numeric questions so formula recall becomes automatic under exam timing.

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Think Macro and Micro

Group formulas by microeconomic or macroeconomic topic in your notes to make structured questions easier to plan.

Formula sheet FAQ

Quick answers about this free PDF, how to use it for exam revision, and how it relates to your official syllabus.

Is the IGCSE Economics Formula Sheet 2026 free to download as a PDF?

Yes. This Tutopiya formula sheet is free to use and you can download it as a PDF from this page for offline revision. There is no payment or account required for the PDF download.

What Economics topics and equations does this formula sheet cover?

This page groups key Economics formulas in one place for revision. Master Cambridge IGCSE Economics (0455/0987) with this 2026 formula sheet. Includes key elasticity, cost, revenue, and macroeconomic indicators explained with student-friendly notes. Always cross-check with your official syllabus and past papers for your exam session.

Can I use this instead of the official exam formula booklet in the exam?

No. In the exam you must follow only what your exam board allows in the hall—usually the official formula booklet or data sheet where provided. This page is a revision and teaching aid, not a replacement for board-issued materials.

Who is this formula sheet for (Secondary)?

It is written for students preparing for assessments at Secondary in Economics, including classroom revision, homework support, and independent study. Teachers and tutors can also share it as a quick reference.

How should I revise with this formula sheet?

Work through past paper questions, quote the correct formula before substituting values, and check units and notation every time. Pair this sheet with timed practice and mark schemes so you see how examiners expect working to be set out.

Where can I get more help with Economics revision?

Explore Tutopiya’s study tools, past paper finder, and revision checklists linked from our tools hub, or book a trial lesson with a subject specialist for personalised support alongside this formula reference.

Need Help Applying These Economics Formulas?

Work through Cambridge-style case studies and data response questions with an experienced IGCSE Economics tutor. We focus on mastering both calculation accuracy and evaluation depth.

This formula sheet aligns with Cambridge Assessment International Education IGCSE Economics (0455/0987) syllabus content.

Always cross-check numeric responses with the units provided in the question and support calculations with contextual analysis for full marks.