;

Business Management Economics B.A.

Information and Policies

Introduction

The business management economics major provides students who are interested in careers in business or management with a foundation in economics and a selection of applied fields related to business management. This course of study prepares students for entrance into the business world or admission to graduate programs—either the master’s program in applied economics and finance at UCSC or graduate programs in business and management at other universities.

The program provides a business and management education embedded within a broader economics and liberal arts context and is closely related to the economics and global economics majors and the technology and information management major. The department also offers a series of accounting courses that prepare students interested in certified public accountant (CPA) licensure. Students in the business management economics major have the option of adding an accounting concentration designation on their transcripts, provided they meet the curricular criteria. Electing to complete the accounting course sequence will prepare students for the Uniform Certified Public Accountants' Exam and the credits will count toward exam eligibility. It will assist students in documenting their concrete expertise in accounting and thus help them compete for entry- level accounting positions in industry and public accounting as well as secure internship opportunities. For the concentration the eight (8) required courses include: ECON 110: Managerial Cost Accounting and Control, ECON 111A: Intermediate Accounting I, ECON 111B: Intermediate Accounting II, ECON 111C: Intermediate Accounting III, ECON 112: Audit, ECON 116: Advanced Topics in Accounting and Ethics, ECON 117A: Tax Factors for Individuals, and ECON 117B: Tax Factors for Business. Students electing the accounting concentration may also reduce their computer literacy requirements by one course (from two to one).

This major has several important elements. First, it combines the strong analytic approach of economics with the technical aspects of management. Second, it recognizes that computing is intrinsic to business and is an essential skill for those who wish to enter this field. Students in this major gain knowledge about using computing as a tool of analysis for economic, statistical, and financial data. Third, the major offers field placements (arranged with the economics advisors) which provide an excellent way to apply students’ academic knowledge of economics, business, and management to issues and problems in the real world; they provide marketable skills as well as important job contacts.

Students who are committed to the major early in their academic career should plan to complete ECON 1, ECON 2, ECON 10A, ECON 10B, AM 11A/ECON 11A, AM 11B/ECON 11B, STAT 17 and STAT 17L and preferably ECON 100A, ECON 100B, and ECON 113 no later than the end of their sophomore year.

Program Learning Outcomes

Program learning outcomes for economics, economics and mathematics, business management economics, and global economics majors:

Critical Thinking Skills: Students are expected to be able to apply economic analysis to everyday problems in real world situations, to understand current events and evaluate specific policy proposals, and to evaluate the role played by assumptions in arguments that reach different conclusions to a specific economic or policy problem.

Quantitative Reasoning Skills: Students are expected to understand how to use empirical evidence to evaluate the validity of an economic argument, use statistical methodology, interpret statistical results, and conduct appropriate statistical analysis of data.

Problem-Solving Skills: Students are expected to be able to solve problems that have clear solutions and to address problems that do not have clear answers and explain conditions under which these solutions may be correct.

Specialized Knowledge and Application of Skills: Students are expected to develop critical and quantitative thinking skills specific to business and accounting.

Communication Skills: Students are expected to be able to communicate effectively in written, oral, and graphical form about specific issues, and to formulate well-organized written arguments that state assumptions and hypotheses supported by evidence.

Academic Advising for the Program

The Economics Department office is located at 401 Engineering 2. There are two staff undergraduate advisors, peer advisors (except summer), a field study coordinator, as well as a faculty director for each of the Economics Department's undergraduate programs. Our faculty, staff advisors and peer advisors play an important role in advising on all aspects of the major and assisting you to maximize your educational opportunities. Please check the department website for more information about drop-in hours.

Getting Started in the Major: Frosh

The economics curriculum begins at the introductory level: no specific high school preparation is required.

This is a course-intensive and sequential program, and students who intend to pursue this major must begin taking classes for the major in their first year at the University of California, Santa Cruz.

Math placement is required for one or more of the foundational courses for this major. For more information, please review the Math Placement website.

All majors study a substantial core of economic theory and statistical methods and they then choose among a wide variety of subfields.

Transfer Information and Policy

Transfer Admission Screening Policy

The following courses or their equivalents are required prior to transfer, by the end of the spring term for students planning to enter in the fall: ECON 1, ECON 2 and first quarter of calculus (MATH 11A, MATH 19A OR AM 11A/ECON 11A).

A minimum GPA of 2.8 must be obtained in the courses listed above. The admissions office screens transfer applicants for meeting major qualification criteria. 

In addition, the following courses are recommended prior to transfer to ensure timely graduation: completion of the calculus sequence (AM 11B or MATH 22/MATH 23A); lower-division accounting (ECON 10A and ECON 10B equivalents).

Prospective students are encouraged to prioritize required and recommended major preparation, and may additionally complete courses that articulate to UC Santa Cruz general education requirements as time allows.

Getting Started in the Major: Transfer Students

The department request that new transfer students send unofficial transcripts of any previously completed coursework to econ_ugrad_coor@ucsc.edu. For coursework completed outside of a California community college submitting course syllabi for articulation purposes is required. The advisors will then be able to make course recommendations for fall quarter or summer session courses prior to the first fall quarter.

All transfer students must complete the three-course senior comprehensive requirement (ECON 100A, ECON 100B, ECON 113) and the Disciplinary Communication (DC) requirement (ECON 104 or ECON 197) at UC Santa Cruz. Economics majors must take at least three of their upper-division economics electives at UCSC. Courses taken for credit elsewhere may not be repeated for credit here.

Students who were admitted under a different proposed major and have advanced standing when they come to UC Santa Cruz require permission from the department to change into the major. Admission to the major is not guaranteed.

Major Qualification Policy and Declaration Process

Major Qualification

The Economics Department administers four undergraduate majors: economics, business management economics, global economics, and economics/mathematics. 

Students must complete three courses, with combined GPA of 2.8 or higher, to qualify for entry to the business management economics major:

ECON 1Introductory Microeconomics: Resource Allocation and Market Structure

5

ECON 2Introductory Macroeconomics: Aggregate Economic Activity

5

And one of the following calculus courses:
AM 11A
/ECON 11A
Mathematical Methods for Economists I

5

MATH 11ACalculus with Applications

5

MATH 19ACalculus for Science, Engineering, and Mathematics

5

ECON 11A is also offered as AM 11A.

All classes included for major qualification determination must be taken for a letter grade. If students have not taken a letter grade, they must appeal by submitting a letter to the Economics Department.

Students should submit a petition to declare as soon as they complete the major qualification requirements or reach their declaration deadline quarter (whichever comes first). Students receiving a grade of NP, C-, D+, D, D-, or F in one of the courses required for qualification to the major may only declare once they have passed the same or equivalent course with a grade of C or better. Students who receive two grades of NP, C-, D+, D, D-, or F in the qualification courses are not eligible to declare the major.

Equivalent courses may be taken at other universities or community colleges. Students should check on assist.org to determine whether a transfer course is designated as equivalent to ECON 1, ECON 2 or the first required calculus course. Transfer students are strongly encouraged to ask the department to review such courses prior to matriculation at UC Santa Cruz, since an offer of admission to UCSC does not automatically imply admission to the economics major.

Students can receive course credit for Advanced Placement (AP) examinations in Micro (ECON 1), Macro (ECON 2), and the first calculus class toward major qualification criteria according to the AP chart.

The Economics Department uses the AP score internally to determine whether students meet the 2.8 required GPA to qualify for the major.  For economics and calculus AB, a score of 5 on the AP exam counts as an “A” , a score of 4 counts as a “B”, and a score of 3 earns unit credit only but no course credit toward major qualification (i.e., does not count).  For calculus BC, a 3 counts as a "B" and scores of 4 or 5 count as an "A”. 

A score of 5 on the IBH Mathematics exam counts as a "B" and scores of 6 or 7 count as an "A".

Please consult with an advisor if you have questions.

Appeal Process

Students who have a GPA lower than 2.8 in ECON 1, ECON 2, and the calculus course are not eligible to declare an economics major. Students not eligible for the economics majors may appeal by submitting a letter to the Economics Department. The appeal letter must be filed no later than the first quarter of their junior year. Please check the "Appeals" area on the department web site for further information on declaring a major or appealing ineligibility and deadlines.

How to Declare a Major

Students can initiate the major declaration process by completing the Petition for Major/Minor Declaration and the Academic Planning forms and by supplying evidence of their grades in the three pre-major courses. Candidates must meet major qualifications listed above under "Major Qualification" prior to declaring the major.

Declaration sessions are mandatory for those seeking to declare the major/minor. If you cannot attend a workshop, you must meet with an economics peer advisor first before obtaining signatures from a staff advisor. Workshop schedules and drop-in advising hours are available online, on our bulletin board outside the office, and in the department office. All students are advised to bring verification of their grades, which can be printed off the student portal, to the declaration of major advising session. Students who do not bring in verification of their grades could have the approval of their petition for major declaration delayed by up to two working days.

Letter Grade Policy

All classes included for major qualification determination must be taken for a letter grade. If students have not taken a letter grade, they must appeal by submitting a letter to the Economics Department.

The Economics Department allows classes toward major requirements taken for the Pass/No Pass (P/NP) grade notification. We recommend no more than two courses in the major be taken P/NP. Overall no more than 25 percent of a student's UC Santa Cruz classes can be taken P/NP. 

Course Substitution Policy

For courses not already articulated through assist.org, students must present their transfer credit summary (available on the student portal) and course syllabi or descriptions to an Economics Department advisor. The department approves courses applicable for economics prerequisites and major requirements. The course substitution form can be found on the department website under "Forms for students". 

Study Abroad

UC Education Abroad Program (UCEAP) is the University of California's official study abroad program and a global leader in international education for over 50 years. All the benefits of home—UC credit, grades, and financial aid—travel with you. Approximately 600 UC Santa Cruz students study abroad on UCEAP every year.

Students can petition UCEAP courses to count toward their major or minor requirements. In addition, there are scholarships available and financial aid can be applied to UCEAP programs. UCEAP provides opportunities in:

  • 46 countries around the world
  • 420 summer quarter, semester or yearlong programs
  • Internships, volunteer work, and research programs

Economics at the Autonomous University of Barcelona--Direct Exchange Program
Located in Spain, the Autonomous University of Barcelona (UAB) is an institution known for its excellent research and teaching. Unlike UCEAP, this direct exchange program through the UC Santa Cruz Economics Department offers the opportunity for students to enroll in three courses that will fulfill economics major requirements and one course outside of economics. Students must take a total of four courses and will receive transfer credit for all courses. Along with enrolling in courses, students may enjoy the renowned architecture, food, and art. This program is open to students who are economics majors in junior or senior class standing and have a 3.0 cumulative GPA or above. Students must also be in good academic standing and 18 years of age or older at the time of departure to Barcelona. Economics courses at UAB may also be taken in Spanish if students have completed two years of university-level Spanish with a minimum GPA of 2.85 in those language courses.

Honors

The Economics Department considers for honors and highest honors students who have completed a major program with superior or exceptional work. Honors decisions are made by the department’s Honors and Scholarship Committee.

At the end of each quarter, faculty teaching the upper-division core courses submit to the department a list of students in their respective classes whose performance is at the honors level. At the time of graduation, all students who received an honors designation in one or more of these courses are reviewed by the department’s honor committee. The faculty committee looks for a record of excellence in courses offered toward the major, with a strong performance in the upper-division core (theory and econometrics—ECON 100A/ECON 100M, ECON 100B/ECON 100N, and ECON 113) being a necessary condition for honors. Although a GPA is not computed for the economics courses, in general highest honors are awarded to students who have received a grade of at least an “A” throughout their economics program. Honors are awarded to students who have no more than two courses with grades of less than an “A-.” Students who have completed a portion of the major at another institution may be asked to submit a transcript for evaluation.

Students interested in being reviewed for honors may request that the department conduct a review, and such requests are always granted.

In general, honors have been awarded to between 10 and 15 percent of each year’s graduating class.

Independent Study

Students are encouraged to petition for independent study on topics of special interest to them. ECON 199, Tutorial, may be used as only one of the upper-division courses required for the major or minor.

Field-Study Program

The Economics Department offers its majors the opportunity to integrate their academic knowledge with career-related work in areas connected to economics or business. The field-study program places students in internships under the supervision of a faculty sponsor and a professional at the workplace. Students can select from a wide variety of field placements such as accounting firms, community non-profits, government agencies, brokerage firms, marketing agencies, banks, and businesses in Santa Cruz and beyond. Students apply for field-study a quarter in advance. Participation in the field-study program requires at least junior standing, completion of courses ECON 100A (or ECON 100M), ECON 100B (or ECON 100N), and ECON 113 as well as good academic standing. Students may earn a maximum of 10 academic credits and complete up to two quarters in a field placement. A 5-credit field study requires 12-14 hours per week spent working on internship duties (a 2-credit field study requires 5-6 hours per week spent on internship duties) and completion of an academic project supervised by a faculty sponsor. Time spent toward the academic requirements set by the faculty sponsor is not included in the 12-14 internship hours spent at the field placement.

Along with the training and supervision by a professional at the workplace, students receive guidance from a faculty sponsor who directs their academic project. Students earn credit through the completion of this project and the job supervisor’s evaluation of performance. Economics field-study courses do not satisfy any upper-division requirements for the major and are available as Pass/No Pass only.

Interested students should make an appointment or stop by the Economics Department at 403C Engineering 2; or e-mail econintern@ucsc.edu.

Combined Majors

The Economics Department offers the following combined majors: economics/mathematics and environmental studies/economics. Requirements for these majors may be reviewed under their separate entries in this catalog.

General Business Management Economics Major

Course Requirements

ECON 1 and ECON 2, ECON 10A, ECON 10B, AM 11A/ECON 11A, AM 11B/ECON 11B, STAT 17 and STAT 17L, ECON 100A (or ECON 100M), ECON 100B (or ECON 100N), ECON 113 or equivalent courses are required for all business management economics majors and are prerequisites for most upper-division courses. Students are urged to complete these courses as soon as possible. Students who are committed to the major early in their academic career, should plan to complete at least ECON 1, ECON 2, AM 11A/ECON 11A, AM 11B/ECON 11B, STAT 17 and STAT 17L and preferably ECON 100A, ECON 100B, and ECON 113 by the end of their sophomore year. Students are also encouraged to choose the letter grade option when taking these courses.

Students who major in business management economics are required to take the following courses:

Lower-Division Courses

All of the following courses:
ECON 1Introductory Microeconomics: Resource Allocation and Market Structure

5

ECON 2Introductory Macroeconomics: Aggregate Economic Activity

5

ECON 10AEconomics of Accounting

5

ECON 10BEconomics of Accounting

5

Plus one of the following mathematics content options:
Either these courses

AM 11A
/ECON 11A
Mathematical Methods for Economists I

5

AM 11B
/ECON 11B
Mathematical Methods for Economists II

5

or these courses

MATH 11ACalculus with Applications

5

MATH 11BCalculus with Applications

5

MATH 22Introduction to Calculus of Several Variables

5

or these courses

MATH 19ACalculus for Science, Engineering, and Mathematics

5

MATH 19BCalculus for Science, Engineering, and Mathematics

5

MATH 23AVector Calculus

5

or these courses

MATH 11ACalculus with Applications

5

AM 11B
/ECON 11B
Mathematical Methods for Economists II

5

or these courses

MATH 19ACalculus for Science, Engineering, and Mathematics

5

AM 11B
/ECON 11B
Mathematical Methods for Economists II

5

MATH 11A, MATH 11B, MATH 23A may be taken to satisfy the mathematics content only by petition via the Mathematics Department.

Students who have completed AM 30 will be allowed to use it instead of MATH 22/MATH 23A by appeal to the Economics Department.  

Successful completion of one of the mathematics calculus sequences from the list above is required for all economics majors, and must be taken before enrollment in ECON 100A (or ECON 100M), ECON 100B (or ECON 100N), and ECON 113. Students are advised to complete the mathematics courses as early as possible in their academic career.

Students planning to pursue graduate work in economics or business should seriously consider more intensive mathematical training; consult an advisor for guidance.

Plus the following statistics courses:
STAT 17Statistical Methods for Business and Economics

5

AND

STAT 17LStatistical Methods for Business and Economics Laboratory

2

Any transfer credit for STAT 17 and STAT 17L will be evaluated on a case-by-case basis. Students should contact the undergraduate advisors by emailing econ_ugrad_coor@ucsc.edu.

Computer literacy requirement

Students must complete a minimum of two courses from the following list (with department approval, a student may substitute other computing courses):

Note: Lecture/lab combinations count as one course

Students with no prior programming experience are encouraged to take CSE 5J, CSE 10 or CSE 20. 

(CSE 10 is not offered regularly.)

Computer Science and Engineering
CSE 5JIntroduction to Programming in Java

5

CSE 10Introduction to Computer Science

5

CSE 12Computer Systems and Assembly Language and Lab

7

CSE 13SComputer Systems and C Programming

7

CSE 20Beginning Programming in Python

5

CSE 30Programming Abstractions: Python

7

CSE 50Business Information Systems

5

CSE 58Systems Analysis and Design

5

CSE 80NIntroduction to Networking and the Internet

5

ECE 13Computer Systems and C Programming

7

Upper-Division Courses

Choose one of the following courses:
ECON 100AIntermediate Microeconomics

5

ECON 100MIntermediate Microeconomics, Math Intensive

5

Plus one of the following courses:
ECON 100BIntermediate Macroeconomics

5

ECON 100NIntermediate Macroeconomics, Math Intensive

5

Plus the following course:
ECON 113Introduction to Econometrics

5

Plus one of the following disciplinary communication (DC) courses:
ECON 104Is There Truth in Numbers: The Role of Statistics in Economics

5

ECON 197Economic Rhetoric: Using Economic Theory and Empirical Evidence in Arguing Policy

5

Upper-division electives

Students are required to take five additional courses: four in business management and one other economics elective.

Students must choose four business management courses from the following list; at least one of the four must be ECON 101, ECON 133, or ECON 135.

ECON 130, ECON 159, ECON 160A, ECON 160B: Students can use only one of these courses as either a business management elective or an economics elective, but the course cannot be counted twice.

ECON 101Managerial Economics

5

ECON 110Managerial Cost Accounting and Control

5

ECON 111AIntermediate Accounting I

5

ECON 111BIntermediate Accounting II

5

ECON 111CIntermediate Accounting III

5

ECON 112Auditing and Attestation

5

ECON 115Introduction to Management Sciences

5

ECON 117AIncome Tax Factors for Individuals

5

ECON 117BTax Factors of Business and Investment

5

ECON 119Advanced Accounting

5

ECON 124Machine Learning for Economists

5

ECON 130Money and Banking

5

ECON 131International Financial Markets

5

ECON 133Security Markets and Financial Institutions

5

ECON 135Corporate Finance

5

ECON 136Business Strategy

5

ECON 138The Economics and Management of Technology and Innovation

5

ECON 139AThe Economics of Electronic Commerce

5

ECON 139BE-Commerce Strategy

5

ECON 159The Economics of Organizations

5

ECON 160A
/LGST 160A
Industrial Organization

5

ECON 160BGovernment and Industry

5

ECON 161AMarketing

5

ECON 161BMarketing Research

5

ECON 164Economics and the Telecommunications Industry

5

ECON 188Management in the Global Economy

5

ECON 194Advanced Topics in Management

5

Courses ECON 191, ECON 192, ECON 193, ECON 193F may not be used to meet major requirements. Either course ECON 195 or ECON 199 may be used to fill one of the five elective upper-division major requirements.

Economics Elective (choose one)
ECON 105Topics in Macroeconomics

5

ECON 114Advanced Quantitative Methods

6

ECON 114LAdvanced Quantitative Methods Lab

2

ECON 120Development Economics

5

ECON 121Economic Growth

5

ECON 125Economic History of the U.S

5

ECON 126Why Economies Succeed or Fail: Lessons from Western and Japanese History

5

ECON 128
/LGST 128
Poverty and Public Policy

5

ECON 130Money and Banking

5

ECON 140International Trade

5

ECON 141International Finance

5

ECON 142Advanced Topics in International Economics

5

ECON 143Policy Issues in the International Economy

5

ECON 148Latin American Economies

5

ECON 149The Economies of East and Southeast Asia

5

ECON 150Public Finance

5

ECON 156Health Economics and Policy

5

ECON 159The Economics of Organizations

5

ECON 160A
/LGST 160A
Industrial Organization

5

ECON 160BGovernment and Industry

5

ECON 165Economics as an Experimental Science

5

ECON 166A
/CSE 166A
Game Theory and Applications I

5

ECON 166B
/CSE 166B
Game Theory and Applications II

5

ECON 169
/LGST 169
Economic Analysis of the Law

5

ECON 170Environmental Economics

5

ECON 171Natural Resource Economics

5

ECON 175Energy Economics

5

ECON 180Labor Economics

5

ECON 183
/LGST 183
Women in the Economy

5

ECON 190Senior Proseminar

5

Field-study

One quarter of field study is strongly recommended. Placements and credit for course ECON 193 are arranged through the economics field-study coordinator. See above under field-study program description.

Disciplinary Communication (DC) Requirement

All undergraduate majors must satisfy the campus’ disciplinary communication (DC) requirement. The DC requirement in economics is satisfied by completing one of the following courses:

ECON 104Is There Truth in Numbers: The Role of Statistics in Economics

5

ECON 197Economic Rhetoric: Using Economic Theory and Empirical Evidence in Arguing Policy

5

Comprehensive Requirement

The comprehensive requirement is satisfied by passing the following intermediate core courses with grades of C or better here at UC Santa Cruz:

Choose one of the following courses:
ECON 100AIntermediate Microeconomics

5

ECON 100MIntermediate Microeconomics, Math Intensive

5

Plus one of the following courses:
ECON 100BIntermediate Macroeconomics

5

ECON 100NIntermediate Macroeconomics, Math Intensive

5

Plus the following course:
ECON 113Introduction to Econometrics

5

Students may elect to complete a senior thesis with consent of an instructor in addition to completing the intermediate core courses.

Planners

The tables below are for informational purposes and do not reflect all university, general education, and credit requirements. See Undergraduate Graduation Requirements for more information.

Sample Frosh Planner

   Fall Winter Spring
1st (frosh) MATH 3 or AM 3 ECON 1  ECON 2
    AM 11A/ECON 11A AM 11B/ECON 11B
     
2nd (soph) ECON 100A ECON 100B ECON 113
ECON 10A STAT 17 & STAT 17L ECON 10B
     
3rd (junior) Econ elective Business Management elective Business Management elective
  Computer Course  
     
4th (senior) Business Management elective ECON 104 or ECON 197 Field Study (optional)
Computer course ECON 101, ECON 133 or ECON
135 (Business Management elective)
 
  Field Study internship (optional)  

The courses shown above satisfy the MF, PE, and SR and, if ECON 193 is completed, then the PR general education requirements. In addition to the specific courses shown in these planners, a student must complete courses satisfying the UC Santa Cruz general education requirements as well as credit requirements. 

Sample Transfer Planner

  Fall Winter Spring
3rd (junior) AM 11B/ECON 11B ECON 100A ECON 100B
ECON elective Computer course Business Management elective
ECON 10A ECON 10B STAT 17 & STAT 17L
     
4th (senior) ECON 113 Business Management elective  Field Study (optional) 
Business Management elective ECON 101, ECON 133 or ECON
135 (Business Management elective)
Computer Course
   ECON 104 or ECON 197  

This planner assumes that a student has completed the major preparation requirements (ECON 1, ECON 2 and at least first calculus course) before coming to UC Santa Cruz.  In addition to the specific courses shown in these planners, a student must complete courses satisfying the UCSC general education requirements as well as credit requirements. 

Business Management with Accounting Concentration

Only students in the business management economics major have the option of adding an accounting concentration designation on their transcripts, provided they meet the curricular criteria. Electing to complete the accounting course sequence will prepare students for the Uniform Certified Public Accountants' Exam and the credits will count toward exam eligibility. It will assist students in documenting their concrete expertise in accounting and thus help them compete for entry-level accounting positions in industry and public accounting as well as secure internship opportunities. For the concentration the eight (8) required courses include: ECON 110: Managerial Cost Accounting and Control, ECON 111A: Intermediate Accounting I, ECON 111B: Intermediate Accounting II, ECON 111C: Intermediate Accounting III, ECON 112: Audit, ECON 116: Advanced Topics in Accounting and Ethics, ECON 117A: Tax Factors for Individuals, and ECON 117B: Tax Factors for Business. Students electing the accounting concentration may also reduce their computer literacy requirements by one course (from two to one).

Course Requirements

ECON 1 and ECON 2, ECON 10A, ECON 10B, AM 11A/ECON 11A, AM 11B/ECON 11B, ECON 100A (or ECON 100M), ECON 100B (or ECON 100N), ECON 113, and STAT 17 & STAT 17L or equivalent courses are required for all business management economics majors and are prerequisites for most upper-division courses. Students are urged to complete these courses as soon as possible. Students who are committed to the major early in their academic career, should plan to complete at least ECON 1, ECON 2, AM 11A/ECON 11A, AM 11B/ECON 11B, and preferably ECON 100A, ECON 100B, and ECON 113 by the end of their sophomore year. Those students interested in the accounting concentration should also complete ECON 10A and ECON 10B by the end of their sophomore year. Students are also encouraged to choose the letter grade option when taking these courses.

Students who major in business management economics are required to take the following courses:

Lower-Division Courses

All of the following courses:
ECON 1Introductory Microeconomics: Resource Allocation and Market Structure

5

ECON 2Introductory Macroeconomics: Aggregate Economic Activity

5

ECON 10AEconomics of Accounting

5

ECON 10BEconomics of Accounting

5

Plus one of the following mathematics options:
Either these courses

AM 11A
/ECON 11A
Mathematical Methods for Economists I

5

AM 11B
/ECON 11B
Mathematical Methods for Economists II

5

or these courses

MATH 11ACalculus with Applications

5

MATH 11BCalculus with Applications

5

MATH 22Introduction to Calculus of Several Variables

5

or these courses

MATH 19ACalculus for Science, Engineering, and Mathematics

5

MATH 19BCalculus for Science, Engineering, and Mathematics

5

MATH 23AVector Calculus

5

or these courses

MATH 11ACalculus with Applications

5

AM 11B
/ECON 11B
Mathematical Methods for Economists II

5

or these courses

MATH 19ACalculus for Science, Engineering, and Mathematics

5

AM 11B
/ECON 11B
Mathematical Methods for Economists II

5

MATH 11A, MATH 11B, MATH 23A may be taken to satisfy the mathematics content only by petition via the Mathematics Department. 

Successful completion of one of the mathematics calculus sequences from the list above is required for all economics majors, and must be taken before enrollment in ECON 100A (or ECON 100M), ECON 100B (or ECON 100N), and ECON 113. Students are advised to complete the mathematics courses as early as possible in their academic career.

Students planning to pursue graduate work in economics or business should seriously consider more intensive mathematical training; consult an advisor for guidance.

Plus the following statistics courses:
STAT 17Statistical Methods for Business and Economics

5

AND

STAT 17LStatistical Methods for Business and Economics Laboratory

2

Any transfer credit for STAT 17 and STAT 17L will be evaluated on a case-by-case basis. Students should contact the undergraduate advisors by emailing econ_ugrad_coor@ucsc.edu

Computer literacy requirement

Students pursuing the accounting concentration must complete one course from the following list (with department approval, a student may substitute other computing courses):

NOTE: Lecture/lab combinations count as one course

Students with no prior programming experience are encouraged to take CSE 5J, CSE 10 or CSE 20. 

(CSE 10 is not offered regularly.)

CSE 5JIntroduction to Programming in Java

5

CSE 10Introduction to Computer Science

5

CSE 12Computer Systems and Assembly Language and Lab

7

CSE 13SComputer Systems and C Programming

7

CSE 20Beginning Programming in Python

5

CSE 30Programming Abstractions: Python

7

CSE 50Business Information Systems

5

CSE 58Systems Analysis and Design

5

CSE 80NIntroduction to Networking and the Internet

5

ECE 13Computer Systems and C Programming

7

Upper-Division Courses

Choose one of the following courses:
ECON 100AIntermediate Microeconomics

5

ECON 100MIntermediate Microeconomics, Math Intensive

5

Plus one of the following courses:
ECON 100BIntermediate Macroeconomics

5

ECON 100NIntermediate Macroeconomics, Math Intensive

5

Plus the following course:
ECON 113Introduction to Econometrics

5

Required courses for the accounting concentration:

Students in the accounting concentration are required to take 10 additional courses: eight upper-division accounting electives, plus ECON 101 or ECON 133 or ECON 135 and one other economics elective.

Courses ECON 191, ECON 192, ECON 193, ECON 193F may not be used to meet major requirements. Either course ECON 195 or ECON 199 may be used to fill the upper-division economics elective.

ECON 110Managerial Cost Accounting and Control

5

ECON 111AIntermediate Accounting I

5

ECON 111BIntermediate Accounting II

5

ECON 111CIntermediate Accounting III

5

ECON 112Auditing and Attestation

5

ECON 116Advanced Topics in Accounting and Ethics

5

ECON 117AIncome Tax Factors for Individuals

5

ECON 117BTax Factors of Business and Investment

5

Plus one of the following courses:
ECON 101Managerial Economics

5

ECON 133Security Markets and Financial Institutions

5

ECON 135Corporate Finance

5

Economics Elective (choose one)

ECON 114 and ECON 114L count as one course

ECON 105Topics in Macroeconomics

5

ECON 114Advanced Quantitative Methods

6

ECON 114LAdvanced Quantitative Methods Lab

2

ECON 120Development Economics

5

ECON 121Economic Growth

5

ECON 125Economic History of the U.S

5

ECON 126Why Economies Succeed or Fail: Lessons from Western and Japanese History

5

ECON 128
/LGST 128
Poverty and Public Policy

5

ECON 130Money and Banking

5

ECON 140International Trade

5

ECON 141International Finance

5

ECON 141International Finance

5

ECON 142Advanced Topics in International Economics

5

ECON 143Policy Issues in the International Economy

5

ECON 148Latin American Economies

5

ECON 149The Economies of East and Southeast Asia

5

ECON 150Public Finance

5

ECON 156Health Economics and Policy

5

ECON 159The Economics of Organizations

5

ECON 160A
/LGST 160A
Industrial Organization

5

ECON 160BGovernment and Industry

5

ECON 165Economics as an Experimental Science

5

ECON 166A
/CSE 166A
Game Theory and Applications I

5

ECON 166B
/CSE 166B
Game Theory and Applications II

5

ECON 169
/LGST 169
Economic Analysis of the Law

5

ECON 170Environmental Economics

5

ECON 170Environmental Economics

5

ECON 171Natural Resource Economics

5

ECON 175Energy Economics

5

ECON 180Labor Economics

5

ECON 183
/LGST 183
Women in the Economy

5

Field Study

One quarter of field study is strongly recommended. Placements and credit for course ECON 193 are arranged through the economics field-study coordinator. See above under field-study program description. ECON 193 also fulfills the PR general education requirement. 

Disciplinary Communication (DC) Requirement

All undergraduate majors must satisfy the campus’ Disciplinary Communication (DC) requirement. The DC requirement in economics is satisfied by completing one of the following courses:

ECON 104Is There Truth in Numbers: The Role of Statistics in Economics

5

ECON 197Economic Rhetoric: Using Economic Theory and Empirical Evidence in Arguing Policy

5

Comprehensive Requirement

The comprehensive requirement is satisfied by passing the following intermediate core courses with grades of C or better here at UC Santa Cruz:

Either one of these courses

ECON 100AIntermediate Microeconomics

5

ECON 100MIntermediate Microeconomics, Math Intensive

5

AND

Either one of these courses

ECON 100BIntermediate Macroeconomics

5

ECON 100NIntermediate Macroeconomics, Math Intensive

5

AND

ECON 113Introduction to Econometrics

5

Planners

The tables below are for informational purposes and do not reflect all university, general education, and credit requirements. See Undergraduate Graduation Requirements for more information.

Sample Frosh Planner

   Fall Winter Spring
1st (frosh) MATH 3 or AM 3 ECON 1  ECON 2
Writing course AM 11A/ECON 11A AM 11B/ECON 11B
     
2nd (soph) ECON 100A ECON 100B ECON 113
ECON 10A ECON 10B ECON 110
  STAT 17 & STAT 17L Computer Literacy course 
3rd (junior) ECON 111A ECON 111B ECON 111C
ECON elective  ECON 112 ECON 116
  Ethics course (optional)*  
4th (senior) ECON 117B ECON 117A  
Field Study internship (optional) ECON 104 or ECON 197 Field Study (optional)
  ECON 101, ECON 133
or ECON 135
 

*Not required for the concentration, but required for California CPA Licensure. At the time of publication, a total of 15 qualified units in ethics is required for the California CPA licensure, 10 of which are satisfied by required courses ECON 112 and ECON 116. 

The courses shown above satisfy the MF, PE, and SR and, if ECON 193 is completed, then the PR general education requirements. In addition to the specific courses shown in these planners, a student must complete courses satisfying the UC Santa Cruz general education requirements as well as credit requirements. 

Sample Transfer Planner

  Fall Winter Spring
3rd (junior) AM 11B/ECON 11B ECON 100A ECON 100B
ECON 111A ECON 111B ECON 111C
Computer literacy course Ethics course (optional)* STAT 17 & STAT 17L
4th (senior) ECON 113 ECON 101, ECON 133 or ECON 135 ECON 110
ECON 117B ECON 117A ECON 116
ECON UD elective ECON 112 ECON 104 or ECON 197 (DC)

*Not required for the concentration, but required for California CPA Licensure. At the time of publication, a total of 15 qualified units in ethics is required for the California CPA licensure, 10 of which are satisfied by required courses ECON 112 and ECON 116. 

This planner assumes that a student has completed ECON 10A, ECON 10B and major preparation requirements (ECON 1, ECON 2 and at least first calculus course) before coming to UC Santa Cruz.  In addition to the specific courses shown in these planners, a student must complete courses satisfying the UCSC general education requirements as well as credit requirements.