What is the economics and business path at the University of Chicago like for undergraduates?

I’m a high school junior looking at UChicago and I keep seeing people talk about economics, business, and related majors there. I’m trying to understand what the actual undergraduate path looks like if someone wants to study economics and build toward business or finance-related careers.

I’m mostly curious about how that path is structured and whether there is a clear route for students who want that combination.
2 days ago
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Sundial Team
2 days ago
At UChicago, the clearest undergraduate route for economics plus business or finance is usually an Economics major combined with courses and extracurriculars tied to the Booth School of Business. UChicago does not have a traditional undergraduate business major, but it does offer a Business Economics specialization within the Economics major, and many students interested in finance, consulting, or business careers follow that path. The university is especially strong in economics, and Booth creates a real bridge through undergraduate business classes, research opportunities, and career access.

The core structure starts with the College’s general education requirements, then the Economics major. Students typically take calculus and statistics early, then move into intermediate microeconomics, macroeconomics, and econometrics. From there, they can choose electives in areas like finance, accounting, game theory, data analysis, public policy, or business-oriented economics.

If you want the most direct business-facing version of econ, the Business Economics track is the one to look at. It is still an economics degree, not a separate business degree, but it includes coursework that connects economics to accounting, entrepreneurship, and business decisions.

Outside the classroom, the path is very developed for career preparation. Students often pair econ with student investment groups, finance clubs, consulting organizations, research assistant roles, and internships, which is how the business side of the path really gets built.

So yes, there is a clear route, but it is not "business major first, finance concentration later" the way it is at some universities. At UChicago, it is more like rigorous economics at the center, then business exposure through the Business Economics specialization, Booth access, and career-focused extracurriculars.

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