I agree with this, but to add on since the post mentioned 3-4 courses.
I would say if you’re picking 3, definitely econometrics, stats/probability to supplement analysis skills. For the third, I would say probably development economics (both to visibly show interest in the topic and have a professor you can try to build a relationship for resources/recommendations in that network). Two potential caveats- if you think the ability to leverage the network of the behavioral econ professor is better, or if that’s a substantially more research skill building class that’s also a pretty good option. Other caveat would be that depending on the level of the course, the Econometrics course could plausibly require or at least benefit a lot from better linear algebra skills- that’d suggest econometrics/stats/lin alg.
If you’re taking 4 to stand out to employers: same logic as I described above probably applies. Would also add that depending on grad school being a possibility for you, many PhDs require or strongly suggest linear algebra.
One final thought here: I’m treating this as if you need to stay within that list- if there is an option to go outside that list (maybe to a CS or stats department?), learning programming/statistical computing skills might be among the highest value couple options.
I agree with this, but to add on since the post mentioned 3-4 courses.
I would say if you’re picking 3, definitely econometrics, stats/probability to supplement analysis skills. For the third, I would say probably development economics (both to visibly show interest in the topic and have a professor you can try to build a relationship for resources/recommendations in that network). Two potential caveats- if you think the ability to leverage the network of the behavioral econ professor is better, or if that’s a substantially more research skill building class that’s also a pretty good option. Other caveat would be that depending on the level of the course, the Econometrics course could plausibly require or at least benefit a lot from better linear algebra skills- that’d suggest econometrics/stats/lin alg.
If you’re taking 4 to stand out to employers: same logic as I described above probably applies. Would also add that depending on grad school being a possibility for you, many PhDs require or strongly suggest linear algebra.
One final thought here: I’m treating this as if you need to stay within that list- if there is an option to go outside that list (maybe to a CS or stats department?), learning programming/statistical computing skills might be among the highest value couple options.