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BA Management Economics
About this course
Management economics applies the rigorous analytical tools of economics to the questions that matter most to organisations: how firms make strategic decisions, how markets evolve and what determines competitive advantage. Where standard management education tends to focus on practitioner frameworks and case-based learning, economics brings formal theory about incentives, behaviour, market structure and regulation that provides a more systematic foundation for understanding commercial life. The combination produces graduates who can think analytically about business problems rather than simply applying received wisdom. At the University of Essex, this four-year degree approaches business through an economic lens, focusing on incentives, behaviour, markets and regulation rather than management alone, as the university's own description explains. You will study microeconomics and macroeconomics, industrial organisation, the economics of strategy, game theory, behavioural economics and the economic analysis of regulation and competition policy. Alongside this economic grounding you will develop understanding of how firms are managed in practice, building the ability to move between formal economic models and the messier realities of organisational decision-making. Essex has a strong reputation in economics, and the programme draws on that research culture: you will encounter current debates in economic research rather than only settled textbook material, developing a sense of the frontier of the discipline and the questions that remain genuinely contested. Graduates go on to careers in management consultancy, strategy roles within companies, financial analysis, economic regulation, competition policy, government economic services, investment banking and data-driven commercial roles. The combination of economic rigour and commercial orientation makes graduates well suited to analytical roles that require both theoretical grounding and business understanding. Further study in economics, management or public policy is also common.
Syllabus & Modules
Typical curriculumStudent Satisfaction
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