- Messages
- 639
- Reaction score
- 842
- Points
- 103
If Economics is your passion and you're thinking of a career in the field, this thread is going to help you.
A few things to start with:
- Economics is not business administration, it is not Accounting. It is in reality an applied mathematical tool to study why markets function the way they do, how to predict future levels of demand and set targets for profit and to see that happen.
- Economics is the best background preferred by firms in Investment Banking, Management Consulting which are the top 2 highest paying careers in the field.
- Just like other fields it has several branches including Development Economics, Financial Economics, Industrial Economics.
- With an undergraduate economics degree you can go on to pursue a masters in the field, choose to do MBA, or to do Law, or if you have the pre-medical pre-requisites then to apply for Doctor of Medicine (MD)
- According to North American statistics Econ majors are the top three highest scorers on the GMAT, LSAT, MCAT
- Generally to work as an economist you don't need a license anywhere around the world (you do though need to be a graduate of a really reputed university and have solid work experience).
For specific queries regarding to A level Economics, course selection at university you can post here.
As an appetizer: You might have wondered how the demand curves that you rigorously study in A levels and have been doing at O levels are made. It's done using data sampling and then applying regression analysis. This part of economics is called 'Econometrics'.
A few things to start with:
- Economics is not business administration, it is not Accounting. It is in reality an applied mathematical tool to study why markets function the way they do, how to predict future levels of demand and set targets for profit and to see that happen.
- Economics is the best background preferred by firms in Investment Banking, Management Consulting which are the top 2 highest paying careers in the field.
- Just like other fields it has several branches including Development Economics, Financial Economics, Industrial Economics.
- With an undergraduate economics degree you can go on to pursue a masters in the field, choose to do MBA, or to do Law, or if you have the pre-medical pre-requisites then to apply for Doctor of Medicine (MD)
- According to North American statistics Econ majors are the top three highest scorers on the GMAT, LSAT, MCAT
- Generally to work as an economist you don't need a license anywhere around the world (you do though need to be a graduate of a really reputed university and have solid work experience).
For specific queries regarding to A level Economics, course selection at university you can post here.
As an appetizer: You might have wondered how the demand curves that you rigorously study in A levels and have been doing at O levels are made. It's done using data sampling and then applying regression analysis. This part of economics is called 'Econometrics'.