I'm already on my way of finding an econ tutor! I went to a trial class before and it really was not what I expected it to be, since it is not that I'm struggling with the content, it's *how* I handle the content. I somehow just cannot integrate my content, stats and theory into the essays and I know that there are particular econ keywords that is required for a band 5 and 6 (which I have no idea how to put them in my essay either). So now I'm looking for a private 1 on 1 tutor who hopefully can fix some of this up so I can get a decent ATAR... The plan is to get a newly high school grad econ student to do the job, so fingers crossed this will work!
thank you for your advice though! it feels good (and at the same time kind of bad) knowing that I'm not alone on this island. Funny how I'm on the other side of the island though, since MX1 is my best subject 
Hello, gumscape.
If that is the case, you don't have an
in depth understanding of the topics and modules. I didn't do Economics, so I can't say how difficult it is with Economics, but I've seen a trend with those who simply surface their understanding of the concepts to those who go further into the concepts. Those who 'rote-learnt' (I'm using this term lightly because it doesn't apply 100% of the time) the content tended to fail with applying their understanding to hypothetical situations. This is often because hypothetical situations are built on the foundations, allowing you to express what you know to a situation that could potentially arise; this is called
applied knowledge, where we use concepts based upon theory to come up with a conclusion that is based around the experiences of others.
From what I can see, this is a problem you're facing; you can't
integrate/apply the ideas, which leads me to think you simply rote-learn content (though I may be wrong). What I suggest is to go back to basics, and really hone in how these ideas are applied based on the experiences of others. Research into the origins of these concepts, because the history of concepts offers more defined aspects about the specifics of these concepts. You'd be surprised as to how much more you can learn when you go that extra mile and cement the origins, applications, and theory of these ideas. Then putting them together becomes a lot clearer, allowing you to branch out to hypothetical situations more freely.
Hopefully, this helps with your problem of application!
-- Opengangs