

BSc Economics
About this course
Economics is the study of how individuals, firms, and governments make decisions in a world of scarce resources, and how those decisions aggregate into the patterns of production, exchange, and distribution we observe in markets and societies. It is both a social science and a quantitative discipline, combining careful theoretical reasoning with empirical analysis. Understanding how incentives operate, how markets fail, how monetary and fiscal policy works, and how trade and inequality evolve are among the central questions the subject addresses, and the methods it employs range from mathematical modelling to statistical testing of real-world data. At the University of Kent, this three-year full-time BSc builds from foundational economic theory through to more advanced applied topics, with a curriculum designed to challenge and develop you whatever your prior background in the subject. You will study core areas including microeconomics, macroeconomics, and quantitative methods, and you will develop the ability to construct and evaluate economic arguments with rigour. Alongside theoretical development, you will engage with real data, learning to apply statistical and econometric techniques to questions about economic behaviour and policy outcomes. The programme equips you to think critically about economic claims, to understand the assumptions underlying them, and to judge what evidence actually shows. Economics graduates are among the most employable in any discipline. The combination of analytical rigour, quantitative skill, and understanding of institutional frameworks is valued by employers in finance, banking, consultancy, the civil service, international organisations, and the corporate sector. Graduate roles include economist, policy analyst, data analyst, financial analyst, and management consultant. The degree also provides strong preparation for further study at masters or doctoral level in economics, econometrics, public policy, or finance, and for professional qualifications in accounting and actuarial work.
Syllabus & Modules
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