

BA Economics and Management
About this course
Economics and management address two of the most fundamental questions in organised human life: how resources are allocated across an economy, and how the organisations through which people coordinate their efforts actually function. Studied together, they form an unusually productive intellectual partnership. Economics provides the theoretical and empirical tools for understanding behaviour, incentives, and market outcomes at scale, while management brings those insights down to the level of the firm, examining strategy, leadership, operations, and the challenges of achieving shared goals in conditions of uncertainty. At Oxford, this three-year full-time programme examines issues that are genuinely central to the world we live in. You will study core economic theory, covering how markets work, how prices emerge, and how macroeconomic forces such as growth, inflation, and unemployment are produced and can be influenced. Alongside this you will explore the principles of management, including organisational behaviour, corporate strategy, finance, and the relationship between firms and the economic environments in which they operate. The two disciplines constantly cross-fertilise each other: economic analysis sharpens your understanding of why management decisions have the consequences they do, while the study of real organisations tests and sometimes challenges economic theory. Oxford's tutorial system means you will regularly be asked to develop and defend your own thinking in small-group settings, building intellectual rigour and confidence alongside technical knowledge. Graduates of this programme are exceptionally well prepared for careers in finance, investment banking, management consulting, business strategy, public policy, and economic analysis. The combination of rigorous quantitative training and applied management thinking is valued in both the private and public sectors, and many graduates enter competitive graduate schemes at leading firms or institutions. Others pursue postgraduate study, including MBAs, master's degrees in economics or management, and research degrees, or go on to careers in government, the civil service, or international economic organisations.
Syllabus & Modules
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