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BA Financial Economics
About this course
Financial economics sits at the intersection of two powerful and closely related disciplines. Economics provides the theoretical and empirical tools to understand how markets, incentives, and institutions shape the allocation of resources, while financial economics focuses those tools specifically on the study of financial markets, assets, institutions, and the decisions that investors, firms, and governments make about money, risk, and time. The combined discipline explains how capital is allocated across economies, how financial crises arise, how central bank decisions affect economic activity, and how individual investors and large institutions should think about return and risk. At the University of Essex, this four-year full-time programme develops your skills in core economic reasoning alongside applied financial insight. You will study how financial systems work, how markets allocate capital, and how financial decisions shape economies, governments, and everyday life. The programme develops the ability to interpret financial events with clarity, context, and confidence, combining rigorous theory with practical understanding of the financial institutions and policy frameworks within which markets operate. You will develop competence in quantitative and analytical methods, working with economic and financial data and building models that generate insight into real-world questions about markets and policy. Essex has a strong research reputation in economics and finance, and the programme benefits from engagement with academic work at the frontier of the discipline. Graduates from financial economics programmes enter careers in investment banking, asset management, economic research, central banking, regulatory agencies, financial analysis, consultancy, and public policy. The combination of economic theory and financial knowledge is valued across a wide range of employers in both public and private sectors. Postgraduate study in economics, finance, or financial mathematics is a natural continuation for those seeking specialist or research roles.
Syllabus & Modules
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