Depending on the school and the reputation of its econ department, opting for econ instead of business can be reasonable. |
|
I went to college undecided between liberal arts and business but I was pretty interested in getting an MBA all through high school.
Freshman year - Liberal Arts undecided w/ ability to transfer to business Sophomore year - Psychology/Business dual major Late sophomore year - decided Business BBA redundant with MBA so dropped it. Decided didn't want Psychology major after doing Research job. Junior - Senior year - Econ major (daydreamed about History). MBA from top school - matriculated after 7 years work experience MBA core courses are very similar to BBA core courses. I wouldn't recommend doing them twice. I'm happy with my decision to graduate with an Econ. degree. Econ is insanely popular because it is viewed as practical. I never wanted to go into Finance which is what people see as the "practical" aspect. Econ is the substitute for business at schools that don't have undergrad business. |
|
Serious question (I am wondering this for my HS kid) - how do high school kids know they want to major in "business" if they have no exposure to parents in the field or prior summer internships? I know applying to undergrad business programs is super popular and competitive, but I'm just curious how kids know what studying business undergrad means and what a future job might entail, and whether they would enjoy working in banking regulation or finance, etc.
Many Harvard classmates did recruiting for Ibanking and consulting then got MBAs a few years later. Some learned Wall St is not for them. Is that different than "business"? Sorry if I sound clueless. I'm in health care. |
"Business" is a massively broad degree. You'll get a basis in accounting, finance, marketing, management, operations, ethics, etc. that will serve you well regardless of which industry you end up in -- including health care, which hires a LOT of managers! Your assumption that business majors all end up as investment bankers is wrong. (Many of them might wish to be paid like investment bankers, but. . . . ) |