Department of Economics
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- M.A. Applied Economics
- Ph.D. Economics
- Why Study Economics?
- Intellectual and Analytical Development
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- What UNCG Economists Are Doing
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- In the News
- ECON 643
Plan and Invest in Graduate School
MBA Programs
- "The best people are more frequently taking economics
as their major than they were a decade or so ago,"
said Richard A. Silverman, executive director of admissions
at the Yale School of Management. "It shows they
have the intellectual fire in the belly to perform well
in an MBA program." (Mabry, Tristan. “Economics,
Once a Perplexing Subject, is Enjoying a Bull Run at
Universities,” The Wall Street Journal,
November 30, 1998.)
- For the highest earning MBA graduates ($100,000 or
more in their first year) economics was the second most
common undergraduate major (19.2%), led only by engineering
(21.9%). All other business majors combined accounted
for only 17.7%. This is a striking comparison because
the number of four-year business degrees awarded nationally
exceeds the number of economics degrees by a factor
of thirteen! (“The Best Business Schools,”
Business Week, October 24, 1994, No. 3395,
p. 70)
Law School
- “Of all the majors, economics ranks in the top
four or five consistently year after year for both applicants
and offers made,” said Edward Tom, director of
admissions at the University of California at Berkeley's
law school, Boalt Hall. "Logical reasoning and
analytical skills" are critical to legal studies.
(Mabry, Tristan, “Economics, Once a Perplexing
Subject, is Enjoying a Bull Run at Universities,”
The Wall Street Journal, November 30, 1998.)
- Out of a possible LSAT score of 180, economics majors
average 155, ranking the highest in a study of the most
common majors for law school in 1992 and 1995. (Mabry,
Tristan, “Economics, Once a Perplexing Subject,
is Enjoying a Bull Run at Universities,” The
Wall Street Journal, November 30, 1998.)
- For the 1994/1995 LSAT, among the 29 majors in which
at least 400 students took the exam, economics majors
scored the third highest (behind physics/math and philosophy/religion).
Paradoxically, pre-law and criminology came in 28th
and 29th! (The Law School Admissions Council, 1996,
Data Services Group, Newtown, Pennsylvania.)
Medical School
- Recently, economics has been the major with the highest
acceptance rate at medical schools in the US. (Jones,
Stephanie and Daniel, and Zebala, Jon. (Medical
School Admissions: The Insider’s Guide, 3rd
edition, Mustang Publishing, Memphis, Tennessee, 1994,
p. 14.)