You study mathematics, statistics, accounting, economics, and finance, and their application to long-term financial management.
Careers: Insurance companies, and other financial services - funds management, superannuation, banking, etc.
It includes the study of models used in insurance and superannuation to quantify and manage risks such as survival, sickness, retirement, accident, fire, flood, and fluctuations in asset values. Actuarial Studies focuses on the actuarial principles involved in the pricing, risk assessment, investment, financial management and the financial soundness of the obligations of insurance companies, benefits plans and other financial security systems.
Is it really hard? Yes, extremely stressful. A lot of people do drop out in their first year, it's tedious to your brain.
However, if you truly LOVE, I mean really LOVE maths (finding ease at solving MX2 problems) then you should be fine doing actuarial, it involves deeper logical thinking like complex MX2 problems. MX2 is nothing compared to actuarial...
My personal thought: It's extremely boring and it will torture my brain with so much maths. I probably won't even pass my first year. Even if I graduated in actuarial, I would not enjoy my career for 20+ years of my life solving such stressful probability/statistics problems. To me, $150,000 to $250,000 per year is not worth it.. my mind will explode.
Increased workloads inevitably comes up in the job of an actuary.
The more money we make, the less time we seem to have to spend it..
Ask yourself if it is worth it? Consider the balance of stress and free time. Do something you're interested in. If you or anyone reading this are doing actuarial just for the money, you will not be able to handle such a stressful career.