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Okay. I've decided if I go the economics route it will be at GMU. I hope my background would be enough to be accepted. Any ideas on getting funding?
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Is that for a master's or doctorate program? I don't plan on a Ph.D any time soon.
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How difficult would an economics graduate program be compared to my undergrad math and physics courses? Of course, this will depend on the university to some extent.
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Guys, What are the canon of Austrian economics, and to a lesser degree Keynesian economics?
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I don't see a Master's, only Ph.D.
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Good point. WVU, Clemson, Suffolk...
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Interesting. WVU and Suffolk are at the top of my list, actually. I'm also considering a Master of Arts in Mathematics at my university, or something similar at a higher-ranked university. I suppose I could still get a job as an economist with a mathematics degee. Mathematics is formal logic. I like the philosophical elements of Austrian. It starts
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Yeah. I knew no problem is 100%. Do we know roughly the varying amount of Austrian in the curriculum among the programs? I've also seen advice on here where people recommend going to the most prestigious university possible to add more credibility to your argument when you contradict Keynesianism. That is not the first time I've heard that argument
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Hulsmann? I'm actually new to Austrian economics so I'm not familiar with too many of the current leading economists. In Europe, I only know of the guy in Spain. My macro class was Keynesian. I remember distinctly thinking to myself that mathematical models don't predict what actually happens. What actually happens does not have to fit these
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I am a math major and physics minor senior. I'm seriously considering a Austrian economics for graduate school. Unfortunately, as you all know, the preponderance of programs are Keynesian. According to my research, I've found some Austrian or quasi-Austrian programs out there, e.g. NYU, GMU, Auburn, West Viriginia, etc. What do you guys think