Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well, FWIW when I was in law school I thought that econ majors had a much easier time than I did as a history major....
History is probably the best major for law school. Not sure why you thought econ majors had an easier time. Econ is a fine major but the history skills are a direct transfer.
Is it because there is tons of reading in law school?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Economics is a solid degree.
Job and career opportunities are enhanced by having a solid understanding of statistics, knowledge of the R programming language for statistics, and Python programming. Those are the tools that let one analyze economic data - which is a typical entry-level role.
Aren’t data analysts of every stripe ripe for AI replacement?
Anonymous wrote:Economics is a solid degree.
Job and career opportunities are enhanced by having a solid understanding of statistics, knowledge of the R programming language for statistics, and Python programming. Those are the tools that let one analyze economic data - which is a typical entry-level role.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can be hard to get a job especially if not from a top school. Take the math version of Econ plus some accounting and finance. There is huge supply of Econ majors and a lot of mediocre undergrad Econ programs.
What is the math version?
This, absolutely. Make sure he gets a BS in economics, not a BA. Big difference in starting and projected salaries.
Big difference is where you get the degree not BS/BA. Top school is matters not. Many top 20 schools only have the BA. Still get those jobs. The 100k jobs are going for the smarts not the expertise.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well, FWIW when I was in law school I thought that econ majors had a much easier time than I did as a history major....
History is probably the best major for law school. Not sure why you thought econ majors had an easier time. Econ is a fine major but the history skills are a direct transfer.
Anonymous wrote:They'll need a PhD in Econ if they want to become an Economist.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can be hard to get a job especially if not from a top school. Take the math version of Econ plus some accounting and finance. There is huge supply of Econ majors and a lot of mediocre undergrad Econ programs.
What is the math version?
This, absolutely. Make sure he gets a BS in economics, not a BA. Big difference in starting and projected salaries.
Anonymous wrote:Well, FWIW when I was in law school I thought that econ majors had a much easier time than I did as a history major....
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can be hard to get a job especially if not from a top school. Take the math version of Econ plus some accounting and finance. There is huge supply of Econ majors and a lot of mediocre undergrad Econ programs.
What is the math version?
Anonymous wrote:They'll need a PhD in Econ if they want to become an Economist.