Bachelor of Commerce/Economics
UNSW Sydney
Type of institution: Higher Education Institutions
Level: Undergraduate
CRICOS: 00098G
This program combines the professional orientation of the Bachelor of Economics program with the range of majors available through the Bachelor of Commerce program. This concurrent degree program allows students to gain greater depth and breadth in business education than is possible in a single degree, thereby giving students the opportunity to major in up to three business disciplines.
Structure
- 32 courses (192 UOC): Commerce and economics core courses
- One commerce major
- One economics major
- Free electives (which can be used to complete a third business major (from approved areas of study)
- General education courses (chosen from other faculties).
Subjects
- Commerce majors include: Accounting
- Business economics
- Business law
- Business strategy and economic management
- Finance
- Human resource management
- Information systems and Information Technology
- International business
- Management
- Marketing
- Real estate studies
- Taxation. Economics majors include: Economics: Econometrics
- Economics
- Financial economics.
Standard entry requirements
- Year 12 or equivalent
- Assumed knowledge: Mathematics
Recognition
Meets the education requirement of various professional bodies including Australian Computer Society (Information Systems), Australian Human Resources Institute (Human Resource Management), Australian Securities and Investment Commission (RG-146) (Finance), CPA Australia (Accounting), Chartered Accountants Australia and New Zealand (Accounting), ACCA (Accounting) and Institute of Public Accountants (Accounting), depending on course selection.
Study information
Campus | Fees | Entry | Mid year intake | Attendance |
---|---|---|---|---|
Kensington | Domestic: $60,500 International: $224,500 |
| No |
|
UNSW Business School | Domestic: $60,500 International: $224,500 |
| No |
|
Further information
The UNSW HSC Plus applies to the Bachelor of Commerce/Bachelor of Economics.