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BA Financial Economics and Accounting
About this course
Financial economics and accounting is a combination that sits at the meeting point of economic theory, financial markets, and the practices through which organisations measure and report their performance. Financial economics asks why asset prices move, how credit markets function, what drives exchange rates, and how financial events ripple through the broader economy. These questions matter well beyond the financial sector: credit conditions, stock market movements, and currency fluctuations affect income, employment, property values, and the cost of borrowing in ways that touch everyday life. Accounting provides the complementary skills needed to understand how financial information is produced, interpreted, and used in decision-making. At Essex this three-year full-time programme grounds you in the economic analysis of financial markets and institutions alongside a thorough understanding of accounting principles and practice. You will examine the causes and consequences of financial events, including how credit markets can seize up and how the effects of financial shocks spread across economies. You will study what determines the relative values of currencies, how stock market prices reflect and influence broader economic conditions, and how regulatory frameworks shape the behaviour of financial institutions. The programme develops both the quantitative skills needed to analyse financial data and the conceptual understanding required to interpret what that analysis means in economic terms. Graduates of financial economics and accounting programmes are well prepared for careers in the financial sector and beyond. Investment banking, financial analysis, corporate finance, economic consultancy, policy work in government or international institutions, and professional accountancy are among the most direct destinations. The combination of economic rigour and accounting competence is valued by firms operating at the intersection of financial markets and business operations. Many graduates pursue professional qualifications in accounting, finance, or investment management, while others continue to postgraduate study in financial economics, accounting, or economics.
Syllabus & Modules
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