

BA Politics, Philosophy and Economics
About this course
Politics, philosophy, and economics is one of the most intellectually demanding and versatile combinations available at university, bringing together three disciplines that each illuminate the others. Politics examines how power is organised and exercised, how governments are formed and held to account, and how collective decisions are made in societies with competing interests and values. Philosophy provides the tools for rigorous conceptual analysis, interrogating the assumptions underlying political and economic arguments and asking foundational questions about justice, rights, knowledge, and rationality. Economics studies how individuals, firms, and societies allocate scarce resources, using mathematical and empirical methods to model behaviour and evaluate policy. Together, the three subjects produce graduates capable of engaging with the world's most consequential questions at a high level of precision and intellectual ambition. At the University of Manchester, you will study this three-year full-time programme, covering core content in all three disciplines and developing the ability to move fluently between them. In politics you will engage with comparative government, international relations, and political theory. In philosophy you will encounter logic, ethics, epistemology, and the philosophy of the social sciences. In economics you will develop both microeconomic and macroeconomic analysis, including quantitative and mathematical methods. As the programme develops, you will have opportunities to pursue particular areas in depth and to write extended independent work that draws on more than one of the three disciplines. Graduates of politics, philosophy, and economics programmes are among the most sought after in the country. They enter careers in finance and investment banking, economic consultancy, the civil service, journalism, law (often after conversion), think tanks, international organisations, and politics itself. The combination of quantitative training, philosophical rigour, and political understanding is unusually versatile, and many graduates move between sectors over the course of their careers. Postgraduate study in economics, public policy, philosophy, or law is also a common direction.
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