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Rithi
Certified Economics Tutor
Rithi
MS Johns Hopkins University • BA Duke University
9+ Years Tutoring

Rithi's quantitative backbone — a neuroscience degree, a master's in biotechnology, and deep coursework in statistics and calculus — means she can tackle the math-heavy side of economics that often catches students off guard, like working through elasticity calculations, interpreting cost curves, or setting up optimization problems. Her 4.9 rating speaks to an ability to make that quantitative reasoning feel approachable even for students who came in expecting a purely conceptual course.

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Noah
Certified Economics Tutor
Noah
BA University of Pennsylvania
9+ Years Tutoring

Noah's political science background at Penn gave him serious exposure to economic policy — trade theory, fiscal policy debates, and how markets interact with government institutions. He teaches economics as a way of thinking about tradeoffs and incentives, connecting supply-and-demand models to real policy questions students actually care about.

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Certified Economics Tutor
Carter
BA Brown University
1+ Years Tutoring

Carter earned his economics degree at Brown and then taught game theory to advanced middle school students at a Johns Hopkins CTY program in Hong Kong — so he knows how to make concepts like Nash equilibria, marginal analysis, and market structures click for learners at very different levels. He connects economic models to real decisions rather than leaving them as abstract graphs. His approach digs into the intuition behind supply-and-demand shifts, elasticity, and welfare analysis so the math and the logic reinforce each other.

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Certified Economics Tutor
Avram
BA Yale University
9+ Years Tutoring

Physics training builds a specific habit that transfers directly to economics: modeling complex systems with graphs, equations, and simplifying assumptions. Avram's three physics degrees mean he's deeply practiced at translating real-world behavior into formal models — exactly the skill students need when working through supply-and-demand curves, elasticity calculations, or equilibrium analysis.

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Certified Economics Tutor
Joshua
BA Northwestern University
9+ Years Tutoring

Joshua earned his bachelor's in Economics and International Studies, which means he learned economic concepts — trade theory, exchange rates, development policy — through the lens of how they actually shape relationships between countries. That global perspective is especially useful for students who need to connect microeconomic and macroeconomic models to the messy reality of international markets and policy decisions.

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Certified Economics Tutor
Katherine
BA University of Pennsylvania
1+ Years Tutoring

Studying economics at Penn while simultaneously completing a music degree meant Katherine had to internalize models quickly — there wasn't time to passively reread chapters on elasticity or game theory when rehearsals and problem sets competed for the same hours. That efficiency now shows up in her tutoring, where she zeroes in on the specific graph, equation, or intuition a student is missing and builds understanding from there. Her 1550 SAT speaks to the analytical sharpness she brings to quantitative econ topics.

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Cole
MS University of Amsterdam
8+ Years Tutoring

Monetary policy, banking systems, and market behavior aren't abstractions to Cole — they were the focus of his cum laude master's thesis at the University of Amsterdam. He teaches economics by grounding theory in current events, so students see how supply-and-demand diagrams or GDP calculations connect to headlines they've actually read. Rated 5.0 by students.

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Certified Economics Tutor
JF
BA Stanford University
6+ Years Tutoring

Supply and demand diagrams are just the entry point — JF digs into the reasoning behind elasticity, comparative advantage, and market equilibrium so that students can tackle unfamiliar problems without relying on memorized setups. His dual math and computer science training at Stanford gives him a quantitative edge when explaining concepts like marginal analysis and cost curves.

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Certified Economics Tutor
David
MS University of Chicago • BA Carleton College
1+ Years Tutoring

An MBA from the University of Chicago and an undergraduate economics degree mean David has encountered the full spectrum of economic reasoning — from microeconomic models of firm behavior to the macroeconomic policy debates that shape real markets. Running a startup gives him a founder's perspective on how concepts like pricing strategy, marginal cost, and competitive dynamics actually play out when you're the one making the decisions.

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Sarah
BA Northwestern University
9+ Years Tutoring

As an economics major at Northwestern, Sarah digs into the same core principles — scarcity, opportunity cost, market equilibrium, elasticity — that introductory students encounter for the first time. She translates abstract models into concrete examples, making supply-and-demand curves and production possibilities frontiers feel intuitive rather than mechanical.

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Certified Economics Tutor
Natalie
Current Undergrad Student, Civil Engineering Duke University
6+ Years Tutoring

Studying both engineering and economics at Duke gave Natalie a quantitative lens on economic reasoning — she's comfortable moving between supply-and-demand intuition and the math behind elasticity, optimization, and equilibrium. She digs into the "why" behind each model so students can apply concepts to unfamiliar problems, not just textbook examples.

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Certified Economics Tutor
Benjamin
BA University of Notre Dame
5+ Years Tutoring

Supply and demand curves are simple enough on the surface, but the real challenge is applying them — shifting curves correctly, interpreting elasticity, or reasoning through market failures. Benjamin's Economics degree from Notre Dame gave him deep fluency with both micro and macro frameworks, and he teaches students to think through cause-and-effect chains rather than memorize graph shapes.

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Testimonials

Because the right Economics tutor makes all the difference.

4.9

Average Session Rating – Based on 3.4M Learner Ratings

Worked with an Economics Tutor

Your customer interface is A+, being your agents or your site, The tutor you found for me is perfect, no formulas or canned lectures but easy flowing lecture addressing my needs. Congratulations for a job well done.

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Julio Aranovich
Worked with an Economics Tutor

Heejin has been very patient with me. I work a full time job sometimes even on the weekends. It has been a slow process with my Korean classes, but Heejin has been wonderful and patient.

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Angela Hussein
Worked with an Economics Tutor

My son has had many quality tutors through this convenient service, and he can hop on at any time of day to get support for a homework assignment or test. It's very convenient and effective.

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Tara R
Worked with an Economics Tutor

I've been working with my tutor for a few months now and the progress has been remarkable. The personalized attention and tailored lessons made all the difference compared to in-classroom learning.

MC
Michael Chen
Worked with an Economics Tutor

The flexibility of scheduling combined with the quality of instruction is unmatched. I can get help exactly when I need it, whether that's late at night or early in the morning before a test.

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Priya Patel
Worked with an Economics Tutor

My daughter went from dreading her sessions to looking forward to them. The tutor made the material engaging and built her confidence in ways I never thought possible. Highly recommend.

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Rebecca Williams

Frequently Asked Questions

Students often find supply and demand curves conceptually challenging—not just plotting them, but understanding how shifts occur and predicting market equilibrium changes. Marginal analysis trips up many learners because it requires thinking at the margin rather than in totals, which is counterintuitive. Time value of money and present value calculations also cause frustration since they demand comfort with both the math and the reasoning behind why a dollar today is worth more than one tomorrow. Additionally, students struggle to connect abstract concepts like opportunity cost and comparative advantage to real-world scenarios, and interpreting financial statements (balance sheets, income statements, cash flow) requires understanding both the mechanics and what the numbers actually reveal about a business.

Microeconomics and macroeconomics require different mental models—micro focuses on individual actors (consumers, firms) and markets, while macro examines aggregate phenomena like GDP, inflation, and unemployment. A tutor helps students build these models separately before connecting them, ensuring they understand why a firm's pricing decision differs from how central banks manage inflation. For AP Economics or college-level courses, this distinction is critical because exam questions often test whether students can apply the right framework to a given scenario. Tutors also help students see how microeconomic principles (like elasticity) inform macroeconomic policy decisions, deepening conceptual understanding rather than just memorizing definitions.

Economics is built on logic and incentives, not formulas to plug into. A tutor guides you through the reasoning—for example, why the elasticity formula measures responsiveness to price changes, and how that elasticity determines whether a firm should raise or lower prices to increase revenue. Instead of memorizing that MR = MC at profit maximization, you'll understand why firms compare marginal revenue to marginal cost and what happens when they diverge. This approach transforms concepts like comparative advantage, the multiplier effect, and financial ratios from abstract rules into tools you can apply to new situations. When you understand the logic, you can tackle unfamiliar problems on exams rather than freezing when the specific scenario doesn't match a memorized example.

Strong Economics tutoring bridges the gap between textbook models and actual markets by analyzing real companies, industries, and economic events. For example, when learning about market structures, a tutor might examine why tech companies operate as near-monopolies, how barriers to entry protect their pricing power, and what that means for investors. Supply chain disruptions become concrete examples of how supply shocks ripple through markets and affect inflation. Understanding financial ratios like debt-to-equity or return on assets moves from calculation to analysis—what does a high ratio tell you about a company's risk and growth strategy? This real-world grounding helps students preparing for CFA exams, MBA programs, or careers in finance see Economics as a practical toolkit rather than abstract theory.

Economics demands comfort with algebra, percentages, and interpreting graphs—but also statistical reasoning and basic financial modeling. Students need to calculate elasticity, work with present value formulas, interpret regression results, and build simple financial models (like a pro forma income statement). Many struggle less with the math itself and more with setting up the problem correctly: knowing which formula applies, what variables mean, and how to interpret results in context. A tutor reinforces these skills by working through problems step-by-step, ensuring you understand not just how to solve an equation but why that equation represents the economic relationship you're analyzing. This foundation is especially important for students aiming toward accounting, finance, or economics majors where quantitative rigor increases significantly.

AP Economics (both Micro and Macro) demands that you not only know concepts but can apply them to novel scenarios—the exam tests reasoning, not memorization. College-level Economics goes deeper into mathematical modeling and assumes you've mastered foundational logic. A tutor helps you move from "I can solve this practice problem" to "I understand this principle well enough to apply it in an unfamiliar context." They also help you develop the habit of drawing graphs, labeling axes carefully, and explaining economic reasoning in writing—skills that are heavily weighted on AP exams and college problem sets. Additionally, tutors can address gaps in prerequisite math or logic early, ensuring you're not struggling with algebra when you should be focusing on economic intuition.

Financial statements (balance sheets, income statements, cash flow statements) confuse students because they require understanding both accounting mechanics (debits and credits, GAAP principles) and what the numbers reveal about business performance. A balance sheet isn't just a list of assets and liabilities—it shows what a company owns, owes, and the equity stake of owners. An income statement isn't just revenue minus expenses; it reveals profitability at different levels (gross profit, operating income, net income) and helps you spot trends. A tutor breaks down these statements piece by piece, explaining why certain items belong in certain places and what ratios derived from them (like ROA, debt-to-equity, current ratio) actually tell you about financial health and risk. This understanding is crucial for anyone pursuing finance, accounting, or business careers.

Opportunity cost—the value of the next-best alternative foregone—is foundational to Economics, but students often treat it as a definition rather than a lens for thinking about decisions. A tutor helps you see opportunity cost everywhere: in a firm's decision to invest in Project A versus Project B, in your choice to attend college versus work, in a country's decision to produce guns versus butter. The key is recognizing that opportunity cost is specific to the decision-maker and context; it's not a number you look up, but something you reason through. Once you internalize this thinking, you can analyze trade-offs in supply chains, resource allocation, and policy decisions with clarity. This conceptual shift transforms how you approach Economics problems and prepares you to think like an economist in real-world scenarios.

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