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Economics and Mathematics Course, University of Sheffield, UK
Course description:

The first year is similar to the economics course of Bachelor of Science. You will study economic theory and technology and math courses. In the second and third years, the gap between the two subjects is roughly the same.

These two themes complement each other. You will develop analytical skills that are essential for economists to make correct judgments. Mathematics adds another dimension to your experience and makes you an efficient thinker and problem solver.

A degree is flexible enough for you to choose a series of courses in mathematics and economics and majors in other disciplines.

Courses:

First year

Core courses of economics:

Economic analysis and policy

Mathematics core course:

Mathematical core 1 mathematical core 1

Mathematical core two, mathematical core two

Introduction to probability and statistics

Numbers and groups Numbers and groups

Second year

Core courses of economics:

Intermediate microeconomics

Intermediate macroeconomics

econometrics

Mathematics core course:

Advanced calculus and linear algebra Advanced calculus and linear algebra

Math option-choose option a or b:

Option A-40 Credit comes from:

Algebra algebra

Analysis and analysis

Statistical influence and modeling Statistical inference and modeling

Option B-40 credit comes from:

probabilistic model

Mathematics and statistics in action

Statistical influence and modeling Statistical inference and modeling

Third year

Core courses of economics:

Advanced econometrics

The way to choose economic methodology-choose from one or more of the following aspects:

Advanced mathematical methods of economics

Advanced microeconomics

Advanced macroeconomics

Modern Finance Modern Finance

Method selection of applied economics-choose at most one of the following:

pedagogical economics

political economics

International trade international trade

monetary economics

economics for development

Health economics

Economic analysis of inequality and poverty.

Gender and racial economics gender and racial economics

behavioral economics

environmental economics

Innovation economics innovation economics

Math options -60-credit elective samples, such as:

metric space

combinatorics

differential geometry

Graph theory graph theory

Code and cryptography Code and cryptography

Measure and probability measure and probability

Bayesian statistics

Generalized linear model

Sampling theory and experimental design

time series

Practical and applied statistics Practical statistics and applied statistics