

MA Economics/Latin
About this course
Economics and Latin may appear an unlikely combination, but they share a deeper kinship than the pairing initially suggests. Both are disciplines concerned with how humans have organised their collective life, one through the structures and incentives of economic systems, the other through the language and culture of the ancient world that gave Western civilisation many of its foundational ideas about governance, law, rhetoric, and the good life. Studying them together develops both quantitative rigour and humanistic breadth in a genuinely unusual way. At the University of Glasgow, this four-year full-time programme gives you a serious grounding in economic theory and method alongside the linguistic and cultural training that Latin requires. In economics, you will learn how individuals and societies make choices about scarce resources, what determines prices and incomes, how markets work and fail, how governments use fiscal and monetary policy, and how economic reasoning is applied to questions of inequality, trade, and growth. The Latin component develops your ability to read classical texts in the original language, engaging with the literary, philosophical, and historical writing of ancient Rome and, through Rome, with the deeper intellectual traditions of the ancient world. The programme includes a year abroad, giving you the opportunity to study in a different academic environment and to bring a genuinely international perspective to your thinking in both disciplines. Graduates with this combination bring unusual intellectual range to a competitive graduate market. Economics opens doors in finance, banking, government, policy analysis, and consulting. The Latin and humanistic dimensions add cultural breadth and analytical discipline that are valued in law, the civil service, journalism, international organisations, and academia. Further study at postgraduate level in economics, classical studies, or related fields is available for those who wish to pursue specialist careers.
Syllabus & Modules
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