Anonymous wrote:If your kid is going to a school where the business school is a separate college, it matters. This usually applies to big state universities. At some schools Econ is in the college of arts and sciences, which is usually less selective than the undergrad business college (where finance) is. So it depends on your kid’s interests. I would investigate the differences between Econ and finance (as subjects, not employment prospects).
Anonymous wrote:Economics is actually a very difficult degree at most colleges, so I am not sure where many of these posters are coming from. The easy path is the “business” or “management” type majors.
My Econ major kid has to take almost as much math as a math major in addition to all of the econ requirements...
Calc 1,2, and 3
Three semesters of statistics
Linear Algebra
2 semesters of Computer Programming
My kid is double majoring in epidemiology, so is also taking biostat and all of the requirements for that degree. Thinking about a career in health economics, but could go either way.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Depends on the school.
Economics majors at the vast majority of universities is terrible. It's basically a major for students that cannot excel in any other subject and want something vaguely "technical" for jobs.
For schools with an undergrad business school that requires applying to get into, always go with Finance, and only Economics if Economics is also within the business school (i.e. at Wharton, not the liberal arts college at Penn). At these schools, Economics majors are basically kids who couldn't get into STEM or the business school.
At the Ivies without business schools, generally the Economics major is chosen by kids that would've otherwise done finance. But
even at Harvard and MIT, the Economics majors are relatively bad compared to other majors.
It's a cash cow program, basically.
Very bias view of the Ivies... really bad advice. Econ majors from Ivy League and top Liberal Arts colleges get first dibs at most undergraduate finance, tech and business jobs. They make a lot of $$$ and more than most finance majors coming out of undergrad business schools. Check out feeder schools and majors at Poets & Quants.
Anonymous wrote:Depends on the school.
Economics majors at the vast majority of universities is terrible. It's basically a major for students that cannot excel in any other subject and want something vaguely "technical" for jobs.
For schools with an undergrad business school that requires applying to get into, always go with Finance, and only Economics if Economics is also within the business school (i.e. at Wharton, not the liberal arts college at Penn). At these schools, Economics majors are basically kids who couldn't get into STEM or the business school.
At the Ivies without business schools, generally the Economics major is chosen by kids that would've otherwise done finance. But
even at Harvard and MIT, the Economics majors are relatively bad compared to other majors.
It's a cash cow program, basically.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Depends on the school.
Economics majors at the vast majority of universities is terrible. It's basically a major for students that cannot excel in any other subject and want something vaguely "technical" for jobs.
For schools with an undergrad business school that requires applying to get into, always go with Finance, and only Economics if Economics is also within the business school (i.e. at Wharton, not the liberal arts college at Penn). At these schools, Economics majors are basically kids who couldn't get into STEM or the business school.
At the Ivies without business schools, generally the Economics major is chosen by kids that would've otherwise done finance. But
even at Harvard and MIT, the Economics majors are relatively bad compared to other majors.
It's a cash cow program, basically.
I agree with your points. But you could say the same about entrepreneurship, marketing, communications, and sociology majors (the easy sounding majors) but you’d be wrong. They get jobs. Not $$$ jobs, but jobs nonetheless.
Anonymous wrote:Depends on the school.
Economics majors at the vast majority of universities is terrible. It's basically a major for students that cannot excel in any other subject and want something vaguely "technical" for jobs.
For schools with an undergrad business school that requires applying to get into, always go with Finance, and only Economics if Economics is also within the business school (i.e. at Wharton, not the liberal arts college at Penn). At these schools, Economics majors are basically kids who couldn't get into STEM or the business school.
At the Ivies without business schools, generally the Economics major is chosen by kids that would've otherwise done finance. But
even at Harvard and MIT, the Economics majors are relatively bad compared to other majors.
It's a cash cow program, basically.