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Posted

If this is true, why do universities have separate masters econ programs for students to apply to along with PhD programs? 

Why dont they just have a PhD program?

  • 2 weeks later...
Posted

I don't know if this is true for econ, but in psych it's because students pay for their masters. It's a good income source for the university, whereas Ph.D.s tend to be "free" for the student.

Posted

That's not at all true. What you may be referring to is that oftentimes student in Ph.D programs who do not pass comps after their first year receive a masters degree as a kind of "consolation prize". That absolutely happens. Students who apply first for a masters instead of a Ph.D usually do so because there is something in their application (GRE scores, Math background, Econ background) that is lacking and they want to improve it.  

  • 4 weeks later...
Posted

A lot of schools give you a pity master's degree if you drop out of their PhD program. I don't think you would find a lot of folks who drop out of an Econ PhD program and then subsequently apply to a terminal econ master's. Why would they if they already got a pity master's for dropping out?

  • 2 weeks later...
Posted
On April 28, 2016 at 9:27 PM, ExponentialDecay said:

Wtf no. What gave you that idea.

Hi, Im an undergrad econ major, and I saw your post in another thread.

You wrote "In the US, the MS is heavily a way to strengthen your PhD application" in that thread, so I'm just wondering if it is better to apply for a Master in econ prior to my PhD application than to apply for PhD directly? (Given that I didn't do well in some of my math courses)

Thank you in advance!

Posted
4 hours ago, Planetarium said:

Hi, Im an undergrad econ major, and I saw your post in another thread.

You wrote "In the US, the MS is heavily a way to strengthen your PhD application" in that thread, so I'm just wondering if it is better to apply for a Master in econ prior to my PhD application than to apply for PhD directly? (Given that I didn't do well in some of my math courses)

Thank you in advance!

Ask your letter writers or anyone else who has a good idea of your individual competitiveness at this juncture. It depends on what you mean by "not well" and what the math courses were, as well as a bunch of other stuff in your profile, some of which you can communicate to me, and some of which you can't. When in doubt, ask someone who knows your work.

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