After years of trailing history, English and biology as the top undergraduate
major,
economics is enjoying a surge in popularity with college students, especially
at the
nation's most elite institutions.
Economics, once considered one of the more difficult subjects for undergraduates
to grasp, is the top major at Harvard, Princeton, Columbia, Stanford and
the
Universities of Pennsylvania and Chicago; second at Brown, Yale and the
University of California at Berkeley; and third at Cornell and Dartmouth.
Demand for an economics degree at public universities and at second-tier
colleges
is growing too, but at a slower pace. At most of those colleges, business
management is far more popular than economics. So while the number of
bachelor's degrees in economics awarded to students at the top schools
is rising,
the number of economics degrees awarded overall remains below the peak
reached in 1990.
At Columbia University in New York, "the popularity of economics has been
rising for the last 10 years," said Richard Clarida, chairman of Columbia's
economics department. This past fall, 398 students signed up to take introductory
economics, making it the biggest class on campus.
Why so much interest in a discipline that has been known to induce bouts
of
nausea in befuddled undergraduates? According to academics, interest in
economics as a major has traditionally risen and fallen with the health
of the finance
industry, the major employer of economics graduates. And with a booming
stock
market leaving investment bankers, stock pickers and securities analysts
among
the highest paid professionals in the nation, some college students are
hoping to
use economics as an entry to Wall Street. Also, because the top colleges
don't
consider business a suitable discipline for undergraduates, students interested
in
the subject often turn to economics as a substitute.
But the swelling ranks of economics majors also reflects more subtle trends,
including a sharp reduction in the age at which economics is first introduced
to
students, stronger mathematical skills among college freshmen and heightened
interest among all Americans in economic ideas and their impact on everything
from wage rates to the price of an airline ticket.
"Increasingly, economic issues are presented to citizens as an important
determinant of how their life is going to play out," said Professor Michael
K.
Salemi, chairman of the economics department at the University of North
Carolina
at Chapel Hill and chairman of the American Economic Association Committee
on
Economic Education.
Recalling President Clinton's 1992 campaign mantra, "It's the economy stupid,"
Prof. Salemi noted that practically everything these days, even elections,
are driven
by economic events.
So much so, that even students "interested in public policy are more likely
to study
economics than political science" these days, said Merton Peck, deputy
chairman
of the economics department at Yale University.
In some states, children as young as five years old are being taught economic
concepts and ideas, according to the National Council on Economic Education,
which provides economic training to 120,000 grade-school teachers each
year.
By the time these students reach college, the subject is easier to grasp
than it was
for students of earlier generations.
"The present generation is less intimidated by mathematics and quantitative
analysis," said Prof. Peck, adding that at Yale, "well over 80% of entering
freshman have had calculus in high school."
Economics also is viewed by more students as a ticket to the nation's top
business
and law schools. Admissions officers say the students are right. "The best
people
are more frequently taking economics as their major than they were a decade
or
so ago," said Richard A. Silverman, executive director of admissions at
the Yale
School of Management. "It shows they have the intellectual fire in the
belly to
perform well in an MBA program."
Many law schools feel the same way. "Of all the majors, economics ranks
in the
top four or five consistently year after year for both applicants and offers
made,"
said Edward Tom, director of admissions at the University of California
at
Berkeley's law school, Boalt Hall. "Logical reasoning and analytical skills"
are
critical to legal studies, he said.
And, apparently, help at scoring high on standardized exams, including
the Law
School Admissions Test. Out of a possible LSAT score of 180, economics
majors average about 155, ranking highest in a study of the most common
majors
for law school applicants in 1992 and 1995 by Michael Nieswiadomy, a professor
of economics at the University of North Texas. (Criminology majors, with
an
average score of 146, finished dead last.) When the study was expanded
to
include less-common majors, however, economics was edged out by
mathematics, physics, philosophy and religion.
For many students, however, economics is just the quickest way to land
a good
job. David Reinstein, 22 years old, started at George Washington University
in a
dual program of economics and political science. By the time he graduated
in June,
he had dropped the politics for economics alone.
"People are impressed because it's difficult," Mr. Reinstein said. "Economics
is
respected." His resume also impressed CNA Corp., an Arlington, Va.,
government contractor where Mr. Reinstein landed a job as a research specialist.
To students of past generations, the ascent of economics up the ivory tower
may
come as something of a shock. Decades ago, left-leaning scholars held the
moral
high ground, and the study of markets, commerce and currencies was regarded
by
many as a less noble, less meaningful pursuit than deconstructing paradigms
of
power such as race, class or gender.
But for the class of 2002, the Cold War is nothing more than a quickly
retreating
childhood memory; the question of military conflict over ideological differences
practically moot. If not liberal capitalism, then what?
"Now that the Cold War is over, economic issues become the central core
of
policy debates," said Yale's Prof. Peck, a former adviser to the Johnson
administration. From his 23 years on the campus in New Haven, Conn., Prof.
Peck can recall countless times when competing philosophies sparked clashes
in
the classroom, but it seems that catalyst has been effectively neutralized.
"Economics, as it is taught at Yale, is not an ideological subject," he
said. "We
don't talk about whether capitalists are greedy but rather about the benefits
of,
say, a fixed exchange rate."