20 multiple-choice questions in College Board exam style. Each has four choices and a full explanation of why each option is right or wrong.
Watch for "real" vs. "nominal" in the question stem. If a question gives nominal values across two years, you usually need to adjust for inflation before answering.
Know which type of unemployment a scenario describes. Frictional, structural, and cyclical unemployment show up constantly disguised as short stories about workers.
Don't confuse the unemployment rate with the labor force participation rate. They use different denominators โ read carefully.
Read the explanations even when you got it right. Each one teaches a small fact that often returns in a different form on the exam.