<p>Can anyone provide any useful insight into the economics major?</p>
<p>it’s interesting that chicago teaches economics as a mathematical science, but i am wondering if anyone has found the math too intensive for the subject, in that it begins to overbear the practicality of economics. At chicago, is a strong facility with mathematics a great advantage or an absolute necessity for the curriculum?</p>
<p>well, you can hate math and still be good at it or you can not go in as an econ major because there are too many damn econ majors at this school </p>
<p>Disclaimer: I myself am an econ major, but I did not enter with any thought of majoring in econ, it picked me out. So many of the people who show up as econ majors just want to go into business so they can make boatloads of money and they dont realize that they should be studying something they love. You can go into business with any degree and go get your MBA later. Econ is not a business degree, it is a social science degree…and a rather academic one at that.</p>
<p>Because it is such an academic study, it does use a lot of math but that doesnt really bother me I guess…I went from physics to econ so while everyone is complaining about how much math they have to do for econ, my math got easier.</p>