Half textbooks say one way, half say the other, I wouldn't be surprised if they accepted both answers.nah its sociocultural because economic influences is: effects of the wider economic climate. And it only specifies what demographic (low income earner) he is in, doesn't reference the state of the economic climate. For all we know in this situation the world could be in the biggest booms, however this guy still has a low income and hence buys his clothes from a discount store
jus my two cents (for question 7)
But you get my reasoning yeah?Half textbooks say one way, half say the other, I wouldn't be surprised if they accepted both answers.
Yeah but I was taught to believe it was economic soBut you get my reasoning yeah?
WOOO nice workEasiest Paper Ever. Confident I got atleast a Band 5 or 6.
I was surprised there was limitations in there so luckily I crammed the finance right before the exam. I was hoping for a marketing question for report
However I reckon I stuffed up the final 6 marker though. A lot of people said they discussed about cost-quality interactions, while I talked about cost-based competition. All in all, good exam.
it can happenHalf textbooks say one way, half say the other, I wouldn't be surprised if they accepted both answers.
Definitely sociocultural... literally the textbook includes someone's income as part of their social cultural environment. As someone being poor isnt really because of a change in monetary or fiscal policy or recession etc, its not economic.it can happen
Yeh but the cambridge textbook says socioeconomic status and income levels is under economic, you could argue either way.Definitely sociocultural... literally the textbook includes someone's income as part of their social cultural environment. As someone being poor isnt really because of a change in monetary or fiscal policy or recession etc, its not economic.
Interesting, I have Business Studies in ActionYeh but the cambridge textbook says socioeconomic status and income levels is under economic, you could argue either way.
It's in the influences section under financial institutions.Unit trust isn't in Business Studies in Action :>