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BA Economics and Philosophy
About this course
Economics and philosophy is a pairing of unusual intellectual depth. Economics provides rigorous analytical and quantitative tools for understanding how markets, incentives, and resource allocation shape human behaviour and social outcomes. Philosophy offers the logical and ethical frameworks needed to ask whether those outcomes are good, whether the models economics uses are valid, and what a just distribution of resources and opportunities would actually look like. The combination is not simply adding two courses together; it develops the capacity to think both precisely and critically about questions that matter enormously but resist purely technical answers. At the University of Southampton, this full-time, three-year BA gives you an in-depth grounding in both disciplines, exploring human welfare and social justice, political ideals and economic realities. You will study economics across its major branches, developing both the theoretical understanding of how economies function and the quantitative skills to analyse data and evaluate policy. Philosophy equips you with tools for logical argument, ethical reasoning, and critical engagement with the assumptions embedded in economic analysis. The programme includes a sandwich year, a year abroad, and work placement opportunities, giving you professional and international experience before you graduate. A wide range of optional modules allows you to tailor the degree to your interests. The typical entry tariff is 136 UCAS points. Graduates from economics and philosophy are in demand wherever careful reasoning and the ability to engage with complex problems from multiple angles are valued. The civil service, financial services, economic consultancy, public policy, journalism, international organisations, law, and research are all common destinations. The philosophical training is particularly valued in roles where ethical questions intersect with economic ones, including areas of technology policy, healthcare economics, and development. Many graduates continue to postgraduate study in economics, philosophy, public policy, or law.
Syllabus & Modules
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