<p>Hey im looking to do business. I already got some schools in mind with undergraduate programs such as wharton, stern, ross, cornell. Can anyone suggest some other undergraduate programs. Also, should i bother looking at schools without any undergraduate programs, and if so which ones.</p>
<p>Cornell does have an undergrad general business program in the Ag School. It is well respected and is not just for agribusiness.
Others include
U Indiana
U Michigan
Berkeley
UVA
NYU
U Illinois
U Wisconsin
Purdue
UNC Chapel Hill
U Washington
USC
Penn State
Notre Dame</p>
<p>You can major in econ just about anyplace and then apply for MBA. For econ there are many excellent universities and LACs. The right one depends on your stats and preferences</p>
<p>If you want marketing then its probably best to get an undergrad business degree, for banking and consulting the top LACs and Ivy caliber schools do as well as the top business schools if not better than many of them.</p>
<p>By "eventually want to do business," do you mean as your Bachelor degree focus? Or in the field post-college?</p>
<p>as in I want to become a business major, whether that means doin somethin as in going for an undergraduate business degree, or by doin exonomics first and then goin to a school for mba.</p>
<p>Well, you should really decide if business is for you, or if you want to keep the option open, as in attend a school with a business program. Many businesses will teach you everything they want you to know after they hire you. The MBA can advance your career, and your employer might pay you to go to the program. Undergrad business degrees can get you certain jobs other degrees can't, but they may also close some doors. Decide if you like the undergrad business idea, if you think that you would like the jobs that the degree could get you, and and if you don't mind risking the jobs that you would more likely get with an econ degree (and not a business degree).</p>
<p>If you want econ, the U of Chicago has the best econ program in the country.</p>
<p>Hmm. I don't know about that....</p>
<p>Arguably, but it's not worth the effort. It's far easier to agree on a list of 10 or so "best" for specific types of econ and then move on with our lives.</p>