Not necessarily regarding the last unless the Econ major is paired with a math major or the Econ major takes math courses beyond the minimum requirements for the BA/BS.
This is especially a serious issue if one is seriously considering Econ grad school(Masters as well as PhD) as the math requirements for admission are such that an Econ BA/BS without a second major in math or taking enough courses to come close to it would be rejected.
The Econ Profs, grad students, and undergrad econ majors serious about Econ grad school or standing out for management consulting/finance were advised to take as many math courses as they could fit in or else their major would be treated little differently than other social science/humanities majors such as poli-sci or English lit.
Granted, part of my view may be colored by seeing several dozen Ivy Econ majors panicking and complaining to the H summer dean because they felt our summer stats instructor was “too hard” and they were literally worried about failing his course.
While I’ll grant his use of a variant of the socratic method to teach Stats for Econ majors was annoying at times, his course wasn’t THAT hard. Especially if one has presumably taken calc or higher-level math courses as Econ majors would…unless I’m mistaken.