<p>Between the schools University of California San Diego, Santa Barbra, Irvine, Davis and Santa Cruz, how would you rank them for their Economics bachelors program?</p>
<p>1st UCSD, 3rd UCSB/UCI, 4th UC Davis, 5th UCSC.</p>
<p>UCI and UCR have Business Economics programs as well. I believe they also offer Business Administration majors too, but only for incoming freshman.</p>
<p>I agree with Thedude44.</p>
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I believe they also offer Business Administration majors too, but only for incoming freshman.
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<p>not true. anyone can do it if you complete the pre reqs</p>
<p>On the application UCI says that only freshman can apply to UCI Paul Merage School of Business.</p>
<p>how do u rank uci's econ major so high if its only been around for a few years? and i dont think ucd's econ should be so low, some of there grad professors teach undergrad classes... ucd grad school of business is the only other uc business grad program ranked in the top 50 among the country besides ucb an ucla.</p>
<p>UCI has had an economics program forever but there Bus/Econ is fairly new, I am sure Davis has an excellent business school and economics department I just believe that UCI and UCSB probably have better non business Econ department. UC Davis is an excellent institution and are right on par with all the UC schools.</p>
<p>Actually, UC Davis has what is called Managerial Economics. This is more geared towards quantitative economics. All of you considering doing consulting work, this is what you do. UCB has the highest recruiting for consulting, obviously, because they have a really great quantitative program, but besisdes that UC Davis blows all the other UC's out of the water for preparing for consulting. UCLA is more known for their worldly economics. They have a really good Macro program, but not Micro/ Quantitative. When Citibank, along with a few other huge companies such as The McKinley Firm, began recruiting in the western US here for consulting and micro jobs they only recruited from Stanford and Berkeley.</p>