tutor2u GCSE Economics Blog

Tracker Pixel for Entry

The grocery shop is getting cheaper!

Saturday, January 07, 2012
Print Tweet This!Save to Favorites
Recommend on Google+

A great article here for students to get to grips with what real terms is. Comparing the grocery shop today with what it would have cost in1862 shows that A Victorian shopper would have needed £1,254.17 in real terms to fill their weekly basket with a selected range of food, drink and house-hold items, compared with £93.95 today.

To read more click here.


blog comments powered by Disqus


Tags

activity, advertising, affordability, alistair darling, anti-competitive behaviour, anti-dumping, apple, appreciation, aqa gcse economics, articles, asia, balance of payments, balance of trade, bank of england, banks, basic economic problem, basket of goods, beat the teacher, benefits, bidet, birthrate, borrowing, budget, budget deficit, budget surplus, business growth, business objectives, capacity, capital, car industry, car manufacturing, cash cow, china, chocolate, christmas trees, class task, cocoa, competition, competition commission, competition in action, competitive markets, complements, conditions of supply, confidence, congestion, conspicuous consumption, construction, consumer confidence, consumer spending, consumers, cost of living, costs, costs of production, costs, revenues and profits, cpi, credit crunch, cross price elasticity of demand, currency, data, data response, debt, deficit, delicious data, demand, demand and supply, demand and supply in action, demand for labour, demerit good, demerit goods, depreciation, derived demand, diagram, diagrams, diseconomies of scale, dollar, double dip, double-dip, downturn, easyjet, economic growth, economic gw, economic policies, economics, economies of scale, economy, elasticity, elasticity of supply, employment, end of term activity, enterprise, eu, euro, eurozone, exam advice, exam help, exam practice, exam style questions, exam technique, excess demand, exchange rate,
All tags for the GCSE Economics Blog
Blog RSS feed Blog RSS Feed

Latest entries

Categories