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Award-Winning College Economics Tutors

Certified Tutor
5+ years
Benjamin
College-level econ ramps up fast once you hit indifference curves, Cobb-Douglas production functions, and IS-LM models. Benjamin studied Economics at Notre Dame and tackles these topics by grounding the math in economic intuition — explaining what a partial derivative actually means for marginal pro...
University of Notre Dame
Bachelor of Science in Finance and Economics (minor: Innovation and Entrepreneurship)

Certified Tutor
3+ years
Samica
College-level economics ramps up fast once professors introduce calculus-based optimization, game theory, and econometric reasoning. Samica's dual grounding in economics and business analytics at Wharton means she can walk through both the mathematical mechanics and the economic intuition behind mod...
University of Pennsylvania
Bachelor of Science, Finance

Certified Tutor
6+ years
Labor and Industrial Relations as a major at Cornell is economics applied to real institutions — wage theory, labor markets, collective bargaining models, and the policy frameworks that connect micro and macro principles to how workplaces actually function. Charlie also tutors calculus and statistic...
Cornell University
Bachelor of Science

Certified Tutor
6+ years
Ethan
Penn's economics program is rigorous enough that Ethan is working through the same intermediate micro and macro material his students encounter — game theory, market structures, welfare analysis — in real time, which means he knows exactly which problem set questions tend to cause the most confusion...
University of Pennsylvania
Bachelor of Science, Economics

Certified Tutor
Ethan
Environmental Science and Public Policy — Ethan's degree sits right at the intersection of ecology and economics, covering cost-benefit analysis, externalities, and resource allocation models. That policy background means he can walk through supply-and-demand curves or market failure concepts with r...
Harvard University
Bachelor in Arts, Environmental Science and Public Policy

Certified Tutor
Gary
At the college level, economics shifts from memorizing definitions to building and critiquing models — interpreting elasticity, evaluating welfare effects of taxation, and reasoning through game theory. Gary's legal training sharpens his ability to dissect arguments and assumptions, a skill he appli...
Brigham Young University-Provo
Bachelor in Arts, International Relations
University of Georgia
Juris Doctor, Law

Certified Tutor
Patrick
Law school trains you to dissect arguments about regulation, market intervention, and institutional incentives — which is exactly what shows up in college economics courses covering antitrust, public policy, and welfare analysis. Patrick's JD from Duke and his history MA give him a lens for connecti...
Emory University
Bachelor in Arts, History
Duke University
JD
Duke University
MA in History

Certified Tutor
9+ years
At the college level, economics shifts from memorizing supply-demand diagrams to grappling with models that require genuine mathematical reasoning — utility maximization, production functions, and econometric thinking. Kevin's PPE coursework at Penn keeps him immersed in this material, and his comfo...
University of Pennsylvania
Bachelor in Arts

Certified Tutor
Jack
Having earned his economics degree from Northwestern, Jack knows the jump from intro to intermediate coursework firsthand — particularly when courses start layering in game theory, market structure models, and the policy debates that require you to think beyond supply-and-demand graphs. His theatre ...
Northwestern University
B.A. in Theatre and Economics

Certified Tutor
Having earned an MBA from Rider University while working in R&D for specialty chemicals, Mary understands how economic concepts like cost analysis, supply chain pricing, and market structure play out in actual business operations. Her PhD in Chemistry from the University of Chicago means the quantit...
University of Chicago
PhD in Chemistry
Lafayette College
Bachelors, Chemistry/Phyics
Top 20 Business Subjects
Meet Our Expert Tutors
Connect with highly-rated educators ready to help you succeed.
Scott
Pre-Algebra Tutor • +26 Subjects
I am a huge component of constant feedback. A session may be wasted if feedback is only provided in the last five minutes. For this reason, I would help students stay motivated by maintaining a conversation over the material and relating to other interesting aspects of their life. Hobbies: books, reading, writing, music, art, sports
Shoaib
Statistics Graduate Level Tutor • +22 Subjects
I am an Economics Master Student from Rutgers University (Top 10%) and Undergraduate in Economics with massive mathematical courses. I have 3 years tutoring experience and have the ability to teach kids from various ethnic, income, language and cultural backgrounds. Hobbies: reading, music, writing, singing, art, books, travel
Mark
Pre-Algebra Tutor • +33 Subjects
I am interested in tutoring math and math-related subjects including economics. Throughout sessions I will always try to convey exactly how important it is to learn the information, because like it or not, even if the student is not interested in learning, I want to convey that in life we often are forced into tasks that are not always enjoyable. Whats important is to persevere and understand that there is no other option but to complete the task or learn the material and we can only gain from giving it our best effort. During free time I enjoy reading The Economist magazine, playing table tennis and badminton, and eating Thai food. Thank you for your time.
Harry
Calculus Tutor • +26 Subjects
I'm a freshman Economics and Math double major at Carleton College. I specialize in ACT Prep and various other economics courses prep. In my free time, I enjoy reading, running, and listening to music. I look forward to working with you!
Benjamin
Pre-Algebra Tutor • +26 Subjects
I am a student at the University of Chicago. I grew up on the upper east side and attended the Dalton School in Manhattan. My whole life I've enjoyed math and science but what I am really passionate about is teaching others. I've worked in all different areas from coaching to teaching, and if you want someone who will be relentlessly positive while also capable and engaged I'm your guy. Hobbies: music, art, books, reading, writing
Finley
Calculus Tutor • +35 Subjects
I am a junior at Harvard University where I study History and Economics. I maintain a 3.9 GPA while playing on a varsity sports team. I understand the challenges that students today face because I too have experienced them. I have plenty of tips to help you stay organized and on top of your work. But most importantly I love to learn and to help others learn. I look forward to working and learning together.
Stephen
Calculus Tutor • +21 Subjects
I am currently an adjunct professor of economics at Fordham University in Manhattan. My degrees are from Rice University (PhD) and Yale University (BA) The PhD is in economics, and that was my major as an undergraduate. Teaching the subject I love is rewarding, working with students to promote their careers (e.g., letters of recommendation, mentoring internships, counseling) is doubly rewarding. I strongly believe in personal engagement with students, while always maintaining the correct standards of scholarship. I should add, finally, that I am also a market researcher for private clients for over 30 years and am currently focusing on urban/suburban mobility markets. I enjoy jogging in the outdoors (no crowded gyms for me) and make a real effort to stay in shape. I would look forward to helping you master the subject of economics!
Hari
Pre-Algebra Tutor • +37 Subjects
I am able to develop an efficient, structured tutoring plan that is pleasant, reinforcing, and rewarding for the respective student.
Adi
Calculus Tutor • +33 Subjects
Hobbies: reading, traveling, music, art, travel, books, writing
Max
Pre-Algebra Tutor • +68 Subjects
I'm a senior at Yale College where I study Economics. I'm originally from Millburn, NJ.
Top 20 Subjects
Frequently Asked Questions
Students often find marginal analysis and opportunity cost conceptually challenging—it's not enough to memorize that marginal revenue equals marginal cost; you need to understand why firms use this principle to maximize profit. Supply and demand curves trip up many students because they require thinking about shifts versus movements along the curve, and how external factors like taxes or technology affect equilibrium. Time value of money calculations and present value problems demand both mathematical precision and intuitive understanding of why $100 today is worth more than $100 in five years. Balance sheet analysis and financial ratio interpretation also challenge students who try to memorize ratios without grasping what they reveal about a company's liquidity, profitability, or leverage.
A strong economics tutor connects formulas to real-world scenarios—for example, explaining elasticity through actual pricing decisions retailers make, or using a company's actual financial statements to teach ratio analysis rather than working only with textbook examples. They'll ask you to explain the logic behind equations (like why the present value formula discounts future cash flows) and have you apply concepts to cases you care about, whether that's cryptocurrency volatility, stock market crashes, or how inflation affects your personal finances. This approach builds the deep understanding you'll need on exams that test application and analysis, not just calculation.
You need solid algebra and basic statistics—interpreting regression results, understanding correlation versus causation, and working with percentages and growth rates are non-negotiable. Financial modeling skills like building spreadsheet models to calculate NPV, IRR, or break-even analysis are increasingly expected in upper-level courses and critical for careers in finance or accounting. Comfort with graphing and interpreting economic models (supply/demand, cost curves, utility functions) is foundational; many students struggle not with the math itself but with translating between equations, graphs, and economic intuition. If your math foundation is shaky, addressing that early—especially algebra and functions—pays dividends across all economics coursework.
A strong grasp of microeconomics (cost structures, market competition, pricing) and financial accounting directly prepares you for the CPA exam's business law and financial reporting sections. For the CFA charter, college-level understanding of macroeconomics, financial markets, and valuation frameworks is foundational—you'll build on these concepts throughout the CFA curriculum. MBA programs value students who understand how economic forces shape business strategy, financial performance, and competitive advantage; demonstrating this thinking in applications and prerequisite coursework strengthens your candidacy. Mastering College Economics now means you're not playing catch-up when these professional credentials demand deeper application of the same principles.
GAAP (Generally Accepted Accounting Principles) isn't a set of arbitrary rules—it's built on fundamental concepts like the matching principle (expenses matched to revenues), conservatism (don't overstate assets), and the going concern assumption. When you understand why these principles exist, you can apply them to unfamiliar situations and understand why companies make certain accounting choices. Many students memorize that you record revenue when earned, not when cash arrives, but struggle to apply this to complex scenarios like long-term contracts or subscriptions. A tutor can help you see GAAP as a logical framework for communicating financial reality, not just a checklist of rules, which makes both exams and real-world financial analysis much clearer.
Rather than memorizing that perfect competition has many firms and monopoly has one, explore how market structure shapes pricing power, profit potential, and competitive strategy. In perfect competition, firms are price-takers with zero economic profit in the long run; in monopolistic competition, differentiation lets firms charge above marginal cost; in oligopoly, strategic interdependence means your decision depends on rivals' moves. Use real examples: why can Netflix charge premium prices (monopolistic competition with high barriers) while gas stations in the same area compete fiercely on price (oligopoly with low differentiation)? Understanding these distinctions helps you predict firm behavior, analyze industry dynamics, and see why regulatory approaches differ across market structures.
Start by asking what each ratio reveals: a current ratio above 1.5 suggests liquidity, but is it healthy or does it mean cash is sitting idle? A high debt-to-equity ratio might indicate aggressive growth financing or dangerous overleveraging depending on industry norms and interest coverage. Rather than memorizing benchmarks, learn to compare a company's ratios over time (is profitability improving?) and against competitors (why does one tech company have higher margins?). A tutor can walk you through real financial statements—maybe Apple or Amazon—and show you how ratios tell a story about operational efficiency, financial health, and strategic choices, which is exactly what employers and analysts actually do.
Opportunity cost is tricky because it's invisible—it's what you give up, not what you pay. Many students think opportunity cost of going to college is tuition, but it's really the salary you'd earn if you worked instead (plus tuition). This mindset shift matters for every economic decision: a firm's opportunity cost of using owned land isn't zero, even though there's no cash outflow. The key is practicing with scenarios where the opportunity cost isn't obvious—like deciding whether to take an internship (opportunity cost: summer job earnings), or whether a company should keep an old factory open (opportunity cost: what it could earn if sold or repurposed). Once you start seeing opportunity cost everywhere, you'll make better economic arguments and ace questions that test whether you truly understand trade-offs.
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