<p>Can someone list out universities known for economics?</p>
<p>Thanks!</p>
<p>Can someone list out universities known for economics?</p>
<p>Thanks!</p>
<p>Top include Harvard, Chicago, MIT, and Princeton… but in general the econ education you receive will be pretty much the same at the undergraduate level. If you’re looking to be an econ major any top school (such as Berkeley, Cornell, NYU, Michigan, etc) can provide you with an excellent education</p>
<p>which one do you prefer LAC or B-school?</p>
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<p>Some schools offer math-intensive intermediate economics and econometrics courses (sometimes as the only choice, sometimes as an option in lieu of less math-intensive versions). Someone intending graduate school in economics may want to prefer a school that offers such math-intensive courses. Good math and statistics departments are also desirable from this standpoint, since economics graduate schools would like to see advanced math and statistics courses like intermediate linear algebra, real analysis, and upper division probability and statistics that statistics majors would take.</p>
<p>To determine how math intensive a school’s intermediate microeconomics course is, check the course catalog. Look up the intermediate microeconomics course and find its math prerequisite. A typical course will list freshman calculus as the math prerequisite; a math-intensive course will list more advanced math prerequisites like multivariable calculus and/or differential equations.</p>
<p>ucbalumnus</p>
<p>can you please provide any suggestions ?</p>