I have always intended to continue straight to the workforce after undergrad (I'm a junior), but very recently I've been realizing that I might want to continue studying economics, both because it's an intellectual passion for me and because many high-level data analytics positions require doctorates in econometrics/statistics. If you wouldn't mind reviewing my profile below and estimating my chances of getting into a good program, I would really appreciate it. I have very little concept of the requirements, so I'm adapting templates that I've seen others post here.
GRE: Will take this summer. I typically do very well (99th percentile) on all standardized tests. Shooting for an 800 in quant.
GPA: ~3.4, hopefully slightly higher by the time I apply
Majors: Economics, Statistics, and Finance (three separate degrees) with minors in Computer Science & Actuarial Science
Undergad: Michigan State (Honors College)
Math: Calc 2 (2.5), Calc 3 (3.0), Linalg (3.0), Abstract Algebra & Num Theory (3.0), Real Analysis (2.0) (can't retake)
Research: data work for a series of papers in the Journal of Income Distribution, coding work for a stochastic frontier model paper (unsure of journal name), co-author of several peer-reviewed reports and hedonic analyses from the MSU Land Policy Institute
Work Experience: research assistant at Land Policy Institute, coding for tech startup in CA, teaching assistant for six semesters at MSU for intro microeconomics, paid research assistant for two professors, risk analytics internship this summer with Deloitte & Touche, thousands of hours as a private econ/math/ACT tutor and paid econ helproom staff at MSU
Skills: can code in Python, C++, some HTML/HAML/SQL; experience with Stata, Matlab, SPSS, and a little R; fluent in French; really strong with Excel
Extra-curriculars: Student Economics Association, Women In Computing, International Corporate Tour (Europe, summer 2013), Honors Students Actively Recruiting, Honors Times Two (mentored two gifted elementary school students), Honors College First Year Council, Honors College Programming Board, Alumni Distinguished Scholarship Competition Student Leader
Awards: Professorial Assistantship, Honors College Scholarship, Lewis W. Kaminga Scholarship (for high test scores), Department of Economics Scholarship for Outstanding Achievement
My GPA is clearly a very weak point. I never considered grad school, so studying was never really a priority for me over my jobs and research. Will this preclude my admittance to competitive programs?
Thank you very much for your input!