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universities in Britain teaching austrian economics

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sammc699 posted on Thu, Jun 11 2009 4:43 PM

I was just wondering if anyone knew if there were any universities in england that teach austrian economics?

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G.R. Steele teaches over at Lancaster. There's also Kevin Dowd who teaches at Sheffield and has done some work on free banking. Other than that, we're out of luck.

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so if i wanted to study austrian economics would it be beneficial for me to do a degree course in economics or in something else and teach myself economics

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Arvin replied on Fri, Jun 12 2009 8:31 AM

sammc699:

so if i wanted to study austrian economics would it be beneficial for me to do a degree course in economics or in something else and teach myself economics

Study to be an historian, then  you could be a history revisionist, write some stuff that is sensational, yet true, and make lots of money. That way you can defend freedom, correct what's wrong and make money at the same time.

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sammc699:

so if i wanted to study austrian economics would it be beneficial for me to do a degree course in economics or in something else and teach myself economics

I'm doing a first year economics course, at times it's really frustrutating studying neoclassical economics, but you get used to it and you learn to appreciate it. Study Austrianism at the same time and you'll get through it.

 

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Solarist replied on Fri, Jun 12 2009 11:45 AM

GilesStratton:
I'm doing a first year economics course, at times it's really frustrutating studying neoclassical economics, but you get used to it and you learn to appreciate it. Study Austrianism at the same time and you'll get through it.

 

 I bet the teacher just loves having an austrian in the class...

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GilesStratton:
I'm doing a first year economics course, at times it's really frustrutating studying neoclassical economics, but you get used to it and you learn to appreciate it. Study Austrianism at the same time and you'll get through it.

That's what I'm going for. And think of it as "knowing your enemy".

The difference between libertarianism and socialism is that libertarians will tolerate the existence of a socialist community, but socialists can't tolerate a libertarian community.

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Solarist:

GilesStratton:
I'm doing a first year economics course, at times it's really frustrutating studying neoclassical economics, but you get used to it and you learn to appreciate it. Study Austrianism at the same time and you'll get through it.

 

 I bet the teacher just loves having an austrian in the class...

Lol, tell you the truth, none of my teachers have a clue who I am (let alone that I'm an Austrian) I rarely go to lectures.

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GilesStratton:
 I rarely go to lectures.

Is that a good idea?

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Thedesolateone:
That's what I'm going for. And think of it as "knowing your enemy".

That was my attitude at first, and I don't think it helps at all. You (especially, since you're going to a top school) are better off going in thinking that it's just a different branch of a science you're very much interested in, albeit a branch that you find to have followed a misguided route (keep in mind Austrianism is both a neoclassical and a heterdox school of economics).

To be honest, I'm kicking myself for not studying harder in high school (although, for a rationalization: the system really did screw me over), but fortunately it doesn't really matter where you do your UG. It just means I'm going to have to put my Austrian studies aside for a while so I can hope to get into a good grad school.

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nirgrahamUK:

GilesStratton:
 I rarely go to lectures.

Is that a good idea?

First year in the UK it doesn't matter, I plan on going in the second year. Fact is, I'll be suprised if I get less than a 2:1 this year, and that's with minimal effort.

As I said to TheDesolateOne, I'm going to try harder next year. But the incentive system over here is slightly odd (i.e. students are basically told to try and gert straight 40s and that's it).

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Oooh someone else doing Econ in the UK. I'm studying it at York.

I gotta say the pure stats and pure maths modules are really killing me. The essay writing I can handle quite well I think, and the economic history module was great fun.

I have a Mathematics 1 and Economic Policy 1 exams upcoming and then that's it, first years over. Apparently all we need to do is pass, and the marks for the first year don't even go into the end degree, so it is quite strange, I guess they want to keep students, and cater to people who aren't great at maths (like me). Hopefully next year I can get into a Mises Uni seminar during the summer, that should be great fun.

Right - back to studying matrices and calculus...

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Fred Furash:
Oooh someone else doing Econ in the UK. I'm studying it at York.

I think Jon Irenicus got accepted in York for graduate studies, York's not a bad university from what I understand, it's better than Exeter in the overall UK rankings I think (but I think Exeter has a better Econ deparment, I could be wrong though).

Fred Furash:
I gotta say the pure stats and pure maths modules are really killing me.

Maths didn't go to well for me this year, which is a shame because I'm naturally quite talented at maths, but I just didn't prepare for them. On the other hand, I loved econometrics, even if it is useless I'm definately going to try and get as much econometrics as I can throughout my course (I've heard grad schools like it too).

Fred Furash:
Apparently all we need to do is pass, and the marks for the first year don't even go into the end degree, so it is quite strange, I guess they want to keep students, and cater to people who aren't great at maths (like me).

Yeah, it's a really odd system. But I think the second year will be better as far as classes go, I'm really getting to like neoclassical econ, so as much as my Austrian studies are going to have to be put to one side, it's a sacrifice I'm willing to make. I think people in Europe have a huge advantage, some of the good European graduate schools are ranked as highly as some of the top American ones, yet, in terms of entrance requirements they're far less competative. Compare the requirements of GMU (a school which really isn't ranked all that highly) with LSE (a top school for economics) and you'll see that GMU actually has higher entrance requirements than LSE for their PhD programmes ( I think GMU requires 3.6 GPA whereas LSE requires 3.5).  

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http://www.topuniversities.com/university_rankings/results/2008/overall_rankings/top_100_universities/

York 81st in the world on this, Exeter not on it [overall, world, THE]

http://extras.timesonline.co.uk/tol_gug/gooduniversityguide.php?subject=ECONOMICS

York 23rd on this, Exeter 6th [economics, UK, times]

http://extras.timesonline.co.uk/tol_gug/gooduniversityguide.php

York 11th on this, Exeter 9th [overall, UK, times]

http://browse.guardian.co.uk/education?SearchBySubject=&FirstRow=0&SortOrderDirection=&SortOrderColumn=GuardianTeachingScore&Subject=University+ranking&Institution=

York 12th, Exeter 14th [overall, UK, guardian]

http://browse.guardian.co.uk/education?SearchBySubject=&FirstRow=10&SortOrderDirection=&SortOrderColumn=GuardianTeachingScore&Subject=Economics&Institution=

York 17th, Exeter 12th [economics, UK, guardian]

http://www.webometrics.info/rank_by_country.asp?country=uk

York 15th, Exeter 31st [overall, UK, webometrics]

 

>> As you can probably tell I'm a big fan of league tables.

The difference between libertarianism and socialism is that libertarians will tolerate the existence of a socialist community, but socialists can't tolerate a libertarian community.

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GilesStratton:
I loved econometrics, even if it is useless I'm definately going to try and get as much econometrics as I can throughout my course (

Econometrics makes me go to sleep. But then I haven't studied it at uni yet.

The difference between libertarianism and socialism is that libertarians will tolerate the existence of a socialist community, but socialists can't tolerate a libertarian community.

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