<p>For the longest time, I thought that I wanted to major in Computer Science. I always felt that developing software was its own art form.</p>
<p>However, recently, meaning the past year, I've been extremely interested in Economics. I am really thinking about a BA in Economics, a BS in Mathematics, and a Chinese minor. I feel that if I were to pursue a BA in Econ, a BS in CS, and a Chinese minor, it would be too much. </p>
<p>I definitely want to minor in Chinese. If I were to pursue CS, I would probably get my BS in CS, my BA in Mathematics, and a Chinese minor.</p>
<p>I would like to know how the job prospects are for the combinations listed above and/or any advice for what I thinking about doing. Thanks!</p>
<p>Note: I've checked with my future college and it is indeed possible to do what I listed above!</p>
<p>Lol, u have 69 posts. </p>
<p>Anyway, we can’t help you compare different major combinations unless you tell us what you’ll be doing after college. You don’t need to list a specific job, just a general field of employment (i.e. finance, marketing, engineering, medicine, etc).</p>
<p>I feel that I love engineering, finance, and marketing equally. However, I feel almost intimated by the rigor of engineering (CS). I recently could not imagine myself coding for 8 hours a day, five days a week. I seemed to enjoy the business side of companies more than the tech side. Are the major combinations I listed employable in the finance world? The engineering world? Thanks!</p>
<p>If you enjoy math and finance, look into quantitative areas of finance such as: derivatives and exotics trading, high-frequency trading, risk modeling, financial modeling, quant prop-shops, and quant hedge-funds.</p>