<p>I know some schools have this, but does NYU have a list of actually percentages of admitted students based on each individual major..?</p>
<p>no </p>
<p>10 characters</p>
<p>oh....</p>
<p>So, do i have the same chances of getting into stern rather than a regular econ major..? i know the answer is no, but how big is the margin..</p>
<p>.....tench</p>
<p>when you mean regular econ major, do you mean econ major at cas? im assuming so</p>
<p>it depends on what you mean by substantial...stern is obviously ridiculously competitive at this point, but cas is increasingly hard to get into as well</p>
<p>I'm an Econ major at NYU. Here's my advice - if you want to study business for undergrad, study business. Don't come here for Econ and then try to weasel your way into Stern after a semester - every year, people try that. I hope this doesn't sound rude, it's just I've met several people at NYU who are trying/tried to do that, thinking they can get into NYU through CAS and take the backdoor to Stern. It probably won't work and if Econ isn't what you want, you'll be unhappy. </p>
<p>Econ isn't an inferior version of a business major - you saying "regular econ major" implies that you think Stern is some sort of superior Econ program. It's not - it's an undergrad business program, not liberal arts. If you want to study business, apply to business schools. If you want to study Econ, study Econ. Transferring to Stern is very difficult, even for internal transfers.</p>