

BSc Business Economics
About this course
Business economics occupies the productive middle ground between economics and business, applying the analytical tools of economics to the real decisions that firms, markets, and organisations face. Pure economics deals with abstract models of behaviour; business provides the messy, competitive, and strategically complex environments in which those models meet reality. Business economics asks how market structures affect firm behaviour, how companies make pricing and output decisions, what the economic rationale for different business strategies is, and how macroeconomic conditions shape the commercial environment. The discipline produces graduates who can think rigorously about business problems. At the University of Exeter, this three-year full-time programme allows you to customise your degree and explore areas within economics as well as drawing on related departments, so your learning reflects a genuinely wide economic context rather than a narrowly defined syllabus. You will study microeconomic and macroeconomic theory, industrial organisation, financial economics, international trade, and quantitative methods, learning to apply economic reasoning to business and policy problems with precision and analytical confidence. A sandwich year in industry, a year abroad, and work placements are all available, giving you direct professional experience and an international dimension that complements the academic content significantly. With a typical entry tariff of 152 UCAS points, this degree attracts students who combine genuine intellectual curiosity about how economies and businesses work with the ambition to apply that understanding professionally. Graduates move into careers in economic and management consultancy, financial analysis, banking, public policy, regulatory bodies, market research, and corporate strategy. The combination of economic rigour and business awareness is particularly valued by employers who want graduates capable of both quantitative analysis and commercial judgement. Many graduates continue to postgraduate study in economics, finance, business, or public policy, building on the flexible intellectual foundation this degree provides.
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