Actuarial science uses mathematical and statistical methods to assess risk and uncertainty. Actuaries are essential in industries such as insurance and finance. You’ll study core modules in microeconomics, macroeconomics and quantitative methods. Optional modules will let you shape your studies around your interests or career plans. These include international trade, survival models or public economics.
Future Career
- Accountant
- Actuary
- Business Analyst
- Economist
- Investment Analyst
- Financial Advisor
- Management Consultant
- Marketing Professional
- Statistician
Year 1
- Economics with Experiments
- Linear Algebra I
- Mathematics for Economics
- Foundations of Microeconomics OR Principles of Microeconomics
- Economics with Data
- Principles of Macroeconomics
- Quantitative Modelling in Economics
- Statistics for Economics
- Economics Skills and Employability I
Year 2
- Econometric Theory
- Financial Mathematics
- Intermediate Macroeconomics
- Intermediate Microeconomics
- ECON Dissertation: Prelim Info
- Econometrics with Big Data
- Economics Skills and Employability II
Optional modules:
- Accounting and Finance for Non-Specialists (Actuarial Science)
- Stochastic Processes (Actuarial Science)
- Development Economics
- Dynamic Macroeconomics
- Applied Economics
Year 3
- Dissertation: Literature Review OR Project/Dissertation
- Dissertation: Research Project OR Dissertation: Research Topics
- Economics Skills and Employability III
Optional Modules:
- Actuarial Mathematics I (Actuarial Science)
- Computational Economics (Actuarial Science)
- Survival Models (Actuarial Science)
- Actuarial Mathematics II (Actuarial Science)
- Mathematical Finance (Actuarial Science)
- Statistical Methods in Insurance (Actuarial Science)
- Labour Economics
- Principles of Finance
- Topics in Macroeconomics
- International Trade
- International Macroeconomics
- Public Economics