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Economics (1 Viewer)

Kartoffelei

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Thank you for everyone who responded to my previous post.
Currently in y11, thinking of dropping math all together in y12. My goal was USYD, but due to math prerequisite, I'm trying Bachelor in Law/Economics in UNSW.
I want to ask:
Does a degree in Economics require advance maths?
If so, is there an option to not do a math intensive course in Economics?
 

yanujw

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Thank you for everyone who responded to my previous post.
Currently in y11, thinking of dropping math all together in y12. My goal was USYD, but due to math prerequisite, I'm trying Bachelor in Law/Economics in UNSW.
I want to ask:
Does a degree in Economics require advance maths?
If so, is there an option to not do a math intensive course in Economics?
I can give a bit of advice since I do an eco major at usyd. If you meant 'advance maths' as in the course 2u maths, then according to the uni thats the assumed knowledge. I'm not sure if they actually check that since when I enrolled in my econ class, it only came up with a message saying that adv math was a prerequisite and all you had to do was press ok on that message box to enrol, so I'm not sure if they actually check your HSC background to confirm you did it.

In terms of whether the maths is difficult, I would say that it does require some commitment. The introductory econ classes themselves aren't too intensive in math, it's mostly applying linear relationships, calculating areas from graphs when lines intersect, and simple algebraic differentiation and solving of equations. If you do econ as a degree rather than a major you will also need to do introductory econometrics classes - basically introductory statistics and this is where there is a significant amount of mathematical learning. All of it is taught with the assumption of no strong mathematical background, though students that did and excelled in 2u and 3u would already know and be proficient in some of the things learnt.

I've heard that in the following years, econ does get more mathematical. As far as I know, almost every econ degree would require some econometrics courses (you might want to check what UNSW says about this, even if they have no specific pre-req level of maths) and even if it doesn't the study of econ itself is very graphical, equation-based and concept-based so mathematical thinking helps. Though if you want to avoid math you could always take a less quantitative econ major depending on what your uni allows, e.g. environmental economics, economic policy, even political economy if you're inclined to do so.

I'm happy to answer any more questions. Hope this helps.
 

fuzi

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I can give a bit of advice since I do an eco major at usyd. If you meant 'advance maths' as in the course 2u maths, then according to the uni thats the assumed knowledge. I'm not sure if they actually check that since when I enrolled in my econ class, it only came up with a message saying that adv math was a prerequisite and all you had to do was press ok on that message box to enrol, so I'm not sure if they actually check your HSC background to confirm you did it.

In terms of whether the maths is difficult, I would say that it does require some commitment. The introductory econ classes themselves aren't too intensive in math, it's mostly applying linear relationships, calculating areas from graphs when lines intersect, and simple algebraic differentiation and solving of equations. If you do econ as a degree rather than a major you will also need to do introductory econometrics classes - basically introductory statistics and this is where there is a significant amount of mathematical learning. All of it is taught with the assumption of no strong mathematical background, though students that did and excelled in 2u and 3u would already know and be proficient in some of the things learnt.

I've heard that in the following years, econ does get more mathematical. As far as I know, almost every econ degree would require some econometrics courses (you might want to check what UNSW says about this, even if they have no specific pre-req level of maths) and even if it doesn't the study of econ itself is very graphical, equation-based and concept-based so mathematical thinking helps. Though if you want to avoid math you could always take a less quantitative econ major depending on what your uni allows, e.g. environmental economics, economic policy, even political economy if you're inclined to do so.

I'm happy to answer any more questions. Hope this helps.
Definitely agree! I'm an econ student at USYD as well and there is quite a bit of maths coming up in the degree. If you want to do pre-honours courses in second year, you have to do a maths class alongside it, and it does get in quite deep with new topics that aren't covered in the HSC like matrices. I think having a good grasp of maths out of high school, particularly in being able to apply the same maths to different, unfamiliar scenarios is really helpful, cause so far in my intro courses, I've been able to apply maths from high school that the tutors or lecturers never mention, you just have to be able to think about the different ways you can apply your maths knowledge from high school.
 

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