POLITICAL ECONOMY PROGRAM


 

 

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FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS


1. Why major in Political Economy, rather than double-majoring in Political Science and Economics or just majoring in one while taking a lot of courses in the other?

The Political Economy major is both less and more than the other two majors. In eleven or twelve courses, it obviously cannot match the broad coverage of two majors totaling 18. And there are some areas in which political science and economics routinely overlap —- the study of economic development in poor countries, for example —- that the Political Economy sequence covers less completely than you could if you majored in Economics or Political Science while taking several courses in the other department. The upper-level electives required for the Political Economy major are meant to provide an understanding of the political context, international and domestic, for the making of public policy. Political Economy is more than the other two majors in its three core courses. The first two bring professors together in the classroom and usually spark lively discussions, while the third offers a rare opportunity for collective and original analysis of student-selected policy issues.

2. What do Political Economy majors do after graduation?

A lot of things. The largest portion goes to Wall Street or consulting, moving on to an MBA and a career in business. The next largest contingent goes to law school. Some others go on to a Masters in Public Policy or other graduate degrees. The remainder run the gamut (one was a principal at eZiba.com in North Adams; a few are in teaching or government). That is, the aggregate profile of graduates in the last ten years is a little closer to that of Economics graduates than it is to those from Political Science.

3. How many people major in Political Economy each year?

Since 2000, the number of majors has varied between 6 and 19. The major has become particularly popular in recent years.

4. Is it advisable to go abroad as a Political Economy major?

Sure. Of all the major requirements, it is easiest to find a course that fills the international/ comparative political economy (PSCI) slot abroad. If you do go abroad, it is highly advisable to take POEC 250 in your sophomore year.

5. What does it take to graduate with honors in Political Economy?

The requirements are much like other departments. You need to have a GPA of at least 3.5 in major courses at the end of your junior spring, stay above that threshold until you graduate, write a high-quality thesis during the fall and winter study period, and defend that thesis at a public presentation. POEC majors do not write year-long theses because these would interfere with the group projects undertaken in the senior spring. For more on honors in POEC, click here.