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NotesEconomicsTopic 1.2Positive and normative economics
Back to Economics Topics
1.2.22 min read

Positive and normative economics

IB Economics β€’ Unit 1

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Contents

  • Positive vs normative statements
  • Why the distinction matters
  • Practice identifying statements

πŸ“Š Positive vs Normative Economics

The Key Distinction: A positive statement is a factual claim that can be tested with evidence (it can be proven true or false). A normative statement is a value judgement β€” an opinion about what SHOULD or OUGHT to be.

Examples to compare

  • Positive: 'Raising the minimum wage increases unemployment' β€” you CAN test this with data (even if economists disagree on the result!)
  • Normative: 'The government should raise the minimum wage' β€” this is an opinion based on values about fairness
  • Positive: 'Inflation is currently 3%' β€” a verifiable fact
  • Normative: 'Inflation is too high' β€” depends on your perspective and values
Look for the word 'should,' 'ought to,' 'better,' or 'fairer' β€” these are almost always signals of a normative statement!

🀝 Why Does This Matter?

Economics involves BOTH positive analysis (what IS happening) and normative judgements (what SHOULD happen). Good economists are clear about which is which.

  • Policy debates always mix positive and normative claims β€” you need to untangle them
  • Economists can agree on positive facts but disagree on normative conclusions
  • In exams, showing you understand this distinction demonstrates sophisticated thinking
Example: Two economists agree that a carbon tax will reduce emissions by 15% (positive). But they disagree on whether the government SHOULD impose one (normative) β€” because they weigh economic growth vs the environment differently.

Positive economics and policy

Positive economics helps inform policy by showing 'if we do X, Y will happen.' But choosing WHETHER to do X is a normative decision.

Positive = 'What IS?' Normative = 'What SHOULD be?' Keep this distinction clear in your essays and you'll impress examiners.

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🎯 Practice: Positive or Normative?

Test yourself on these statements. Try to classify each one before reading the answer.

  • 'GDP grew by 2% last year' β†’ POSITIVE (testable fact)
  • 'The government should spend more on education' β†’ NORMATIVE (value judgement)
  • 'A tariff on imports will raise domestic prices' β†’ POSITIVE (can be tested with data)
  • 'Free trade is better than protectionism' β†’ NORMATIVE (depends on values β€” better for whom?)
  • 'Unemployment fell to 4%' β†’ POSITIVE (verifiable)
  • 'The rich should pay higher taxes' β†’ NORMATIVE (opinion about fairness)
A positive statement doesn't have to be TRUE β€” it just has to be TESTABLE. 'The moon is made of cheese' is a positive statement (you can test it), even though it's false!

Tricky cases

  • 'Minimum wage increases cause unemployment' β€” POSITIVE (even though economists disagree about whether it's true, it CAN be tested)
  • 'The government has increased spending by 5%' β€” POSITIVE (a fact about what happened)
  • 'The government's spending increase was a good idea' β€” NORMATIVE (a judgement about the decision)

Related Economics Topics

Continue learning with these related topics from the same unit:

1.1.1Scarcity and choice
1.1.2Opportunity cost and trade-offs
1.1.3Free goods vs economic goods
1.1.4The three basic economic questions
View all Economics topics

Improve your exam technique

Command terms, paper structure, and mark-scheme tips for Economics

IB Exam Questions on Positive and normative economics

Practice with IB-style questions filtered to Topic 1.2.2. Get instant AI feedback on every answer.

Practice Topic 1.2.2 QuestionsBrowse All Economics Topics

How Positive and normative economics Appears in IB Exams

Examiners use specific command terms when asking about this topic. Here's what to expect:

Define

Give the precise meaning of key terms related to Positive and normative economics.

AO1
Describe

Give a detailed account of processes or features in Positive and normative economics.

AO2
Explain

Give reasons WHY β€” cause and effect within Positive and normative economics.

AO3
Evaluate

Weigh strengths AND limitations of approaches in Positive and normative economics.

AO3
Discuss

Present arguments FOR and AGAINST with a balanced conclusion.

AO3

See the full IB Command Terms guide β†’

Previous
1.2.1Economic models and assumptions
Next
Limitations of economic models1.2.3

Don’t just read about Positive and normative economics β€” practice it

Apply what you learned with real exam-style questions. AI feedback shows exactly how to improve your answers.

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