Why study Economics in the UK?
UK Economics programmes combine microeconomic theory, macroeconomic analysis, econometrics and applied policy modules (development economics, behavioural economics, environmental economics, health economics). The maths content varies — Russell Group universities and LSE require strong Maths backgrounds; post-1992 universities and pathway colleges offer more applied programmes accessible to students without A-Level Maths. International fees range from £15,000 to £28,000 per year at universities and £12,500 to £17,500 at pathway colleges. Foundation Year, BSc/BA, Top-up and MSc routes are all available, and a small number of universities offer four-year Integrated Master's (MEcon or MMath/Econ).
Career outcomes
Graduates work in investment banking, consulting (Bain, BCG, McKinsey, Oliver Wyman recruit heavily from UK economics programmes), the Government Economic Service, the Bank of England, the Office for National Statistics, the IFS, the World Bank, the IMF and major NGOs. According to LEO data, Economics graduates have one of the highest median earnings of any UK subject — around £33,000-£37,000 fifteen months after graduation, rising to £50,000+ at top-tier institutions. The Graduate Route visa applies; many financial sector employers sponsor Skilled Worker visas for graduate hires.
Courses available through AEN
We work with UK partners offering Foundation Year Economics (£5,760-£9,790), BSc / BA Economics, BSc Economics with Finance, BSc Economics and Mathematics (joint honours), Top-up Economics, and MSc Economics, MSc Financial Economics and MSc Development Economics programmes. Intakes usually run in September with some January starts at pathway colleges.
Entry requirements
Direct BSc Economics entry at Russell Group universities typically requires AAA-AAB including Maths A-Level (or equivalent international qualification). Post-1992 universities accept lower grades and often without Maths A-Level. IELTS 6.5-7.0. Foundation Year programmes are designed to bridge to BSc Economics for students without strong Maths backgrounds. MSc Economics requires a quantitative undergraduate degree (typically 2:1) at most universities.