<p>Curious to know which one is easier.</p>
<p>Do you like reading and writing? Is language something you are good at? If so, English would be easier than Economics. If you struggle with writing and reading and do not grasp the concepts of language well, but have a methodical and analytical mind that grasps quantitative concepts with ease, Economics would be easier. It really depends on the individual. </p>
<p>I find that I fit in the middle of these two; I’m naturally quantitative and analytical and I enjoy the concepts of the English language as well. Which of these majors would help my GPA since I plan to attend grad school eventually?</p>
<p>LOL! CS, you are too funny man. You are asking to define nothingness. How can WE tell YOU which major you are likely to excel in more? You should major in Philosophy! </p>
<p>“I find that I fit in the middle of these two; I’m naturally quantitative and analytical and I enjoy the concepts of the English language as well. Which of these majors would help my GPA since I plan to attend grad school eventually?”</p>
<p>Take several hybrid courses and gradually prune out the classes that you don’t like which also don’t fit your particular wiring. For example, you have a “CS” substring in your user name, so one recommendation would be computer science which requires both language constructs and a fair amount of math. For example, computational linguistics for the same reason. Courses in logic, the philosophy of logic or computational logic. I would guess that courses like that will eventually allow your brain to reveal to itsself its natural set of tropisms. Study, learn, adapt, iterate.</p>
<p>How can you possibly be interested in grad school if you haven’t decided on a major? That’s nuts.</p>
<p>Thanks for the advice. I’ll try out all of your suggestions.</p>
<p>@WasatchWriter, I want to pursue something I’m interested in during undergrad and then gain professional skills for employment during grad school.</p>