IGCSE topical past paper questions

6.1 International specialisation

0455/22/F/M/24 

New Zealand is a high-income country with a low unemployment rate and a surplus of imports over exports. Recently, its government has made some important economic decisions. In 2022, it banned everyone born after 2008 from buying cigarettes. A year before, it gave permission for firms to explore for oil in the country. 

0455/22/O/N/23 

Botswana uses both capital goods and labour in its diamond mining industry. The country had an average economic growth rate of 3.8% between 2015 and 2019 compared to a global average of 2.8%. Over this period, the country experienced a low inflation rate and a move away from protectionism and towards free international trade. 

0455/21/O/N/23 

Malaysia once specialised in the production and export of natural rubber. The production of natural rubber was very labour‑intensive. However, despite still being in the top 5 of natural rubber exporters in the world, Malaysia has moved towards producing manufactured goods that use natural rubber instead of just producing and exporting this primary product. 

0455/21/M/J/21 

There is an area of rubbish, three times the size of France, floating in the Pacific Ocean called the Great Pacific Garbage Patch. It is made up of rubbish including old fishing nets but most is plastic waste. It is forecast that, by 2050, there will be more plastic in the Pacific Ocean than fish. A number of islands in the Pacific Ocean specialise in fishing. Greater pollution will increase the social cost of the fishing industry. 

0455/21/O/N/20 

South east Asian countries have reduced tariffs between themselves through the ASEAN Free Trade Agreement. ASEAN member countries are also removing non-tariff methods of protection. The intention is to raise economic growth through more international trade. This should enable small and medium-sized firms in ASEAN countries to grow and increase their exports. 

0455/23/M/J/18 

In the 1990s Cambodia became a mixed economy. One of the results of this was specialisation in the clothing industry. In 2005, import quotas for clothing in the key markets of the USA and the EU were removed. Clothing now accounts for 80% of Cambodia’s exports. The increased role of the private sector has resulted in a rise in malnutrition in Cambodia.