<p>I am currently a third year Economics major and have decided to double major. The school I attend has a decently prestigious undergraduate business program that I have been accepted into and now I am deciding which business major to go for. My school is ranked number 1 in the nation in Supply Chain Management and T25 in Finance. I have about an equal interest in both. Which major, with Economics, do you think would offer more (and better paying) career options upon graduation, and would ultimately be more advantageous on a law school application in the distant future? I have about a 3.5 cumgpa.</p>
<p>If law school is your ultimate desire - the Finance/Econ major would be better IMHO. Always good to have a lawyer that understands finance and accounting, especially if your are considering corporate law and being a managing partner one day.</p>
<p>I really don’t think law schools care about what your major(s) are as long as you have good LSAT’s and GPA’s!</p>
<p>Law School Admission is mainly a numbers game - being an Econ major you should understand this.</p>
<p>CJ</p>
<p>If my school was top ranked in the nation for SCM, I would definitely major in that.</p>
<p>SCM will not contribute to your goals of attending law school. You’ll need to develop skills in critically reading complex documents and writing persuasively. SCM is a vocational major designed to teach you those vocation-specific skills (logistics planning, contract negotiation, strategic sourcing, cost reduction analysis, etc.)</p>