That’s a positive way to spin it. The negative way is that the “multi-discipline aspect” is simply an excuse to avoid hard quant courses. Many consulting firms, who are hugely focused on numeracy skills, will be skeptical for that reason.
S18 chose to do Public Affairs and it was filled with people who were desperate to avoid the quantitative rigor that would be needed for an economics major (which itself was viewed as less rigorous than the math-econ major that students with aspirations for a PhD are advised to take). Students even complained about (and gave bad reviews to) the professor who taught the one required quantitative analysis course because they claimed the watered down economics was “too hard” and they didn’t like the idea of a final exam.
S ended up supplementing the required classes with courses in advanced R, doing a thesis involving big data analysis, etc. in order to demonstrate his numerical skills.
His consulting job is all about Excel tools and PowerPoint presentations. I’ve also been a strategy consultant for 30 years and in my world, for all intents and purposes, “problem solving skills” means Excel skills.