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U.S. News adds economics degree programs to its college rankings — and these 7 schools tied for No. 1

U.S. News released its “Best Colleges” report on Monday, a much-anticipated annual list that ranks undergraduate colleges in the U.S., as well as some specific programs, such as business and finance studies.

And, for the first time, the list for 2024 also ranks undergraduate economics degree programs. So which school has the best undergrad programs for budding economists? There’s actually a seven-way tie for the top spot.

These are the top undergraduate economics programs in the country, according to the U.S. News “Best College” rankings:

School

Economics program rank

Tuition

Harvard University

1 (tie)

$59,076

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

1 (tie)

$60,156

Princeton University

1 (tie)

$59,710

Stanford University

1 (tie)

$62,484

University of California, Berkeley

1 (tie)

$48,465

University of Chicago

1 (tie)

$65,619

Yale University

1 (tie)

$64,700

Columbia University

8 (tie)

$65,524

University of Pennsylvania

8 (tie)

$66,104

Northwestern University

10

$65,997

Harvard University, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), Princeton University, Stanford University, the University of California at Berkeley, the University of Chicago and Yale University all tied for the top spot. And half of the universities in the top 10 are Ivy League institutions.

See also: These business majors have the highest ‘return on investment’ — with college graduates earning up to $165,000 a year

The news organizations’s methodology for its rankings takes into account factors including graduation rates, first-year retention rates, the income of recent graduates compared to a recent high school grad, standardized test scores and faculty ratio, among many other measures. U.S. News says it uses data that is oftentimes reported directly from colleges to calculate its rankings.

As for other finance-related courses of study, the report also highlights undergraduate business programs and finance programs. And you’ll see plenty of overlap between these top picks, and the schools with the most lauded economics programs.

Here are the top undergraduate business programs, according to the U.S. News rankings:

School

Business program rank

Tuition

University of Pennsylvania

1

$66,104

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

2

$60,156

University of California, Berkeley

3

$48,465

University of Michigan

4

$57,273

New York University

5

$60,438

University of Texas at Austin

6

$41,070

Carnegie Mellon University

7

$63,829

Cornell University

8

$66,014

Indiana University

9

$40,482

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

10

$39,338

What’s more, many of these top undergraduate business programs were also featured high on the overall college ranking list, including MIT (No. 2), the University of Pennsylvania (No. 6) and Cornell (tied for 12th place).

Read more: Duke up, UChicago down: Here’s the 2024 college rankings list from U.S. News

Some notable undergraduate alumni from these colleges who have made waves in the business industry include: former President Donald Trump, who went to the University of Pennsylvania; Apple
AAPL,
+1.69%
co-founder Steve Wozniak, who went to UC Berkeley; and Google
GOOG,
+0.48%
co-founder Larry Page, who attended the University of Michigan.

U.S. News also showcased schools that have the best finance programs at the undergraduate level. They are:

School

Finance program rank

Tuition

University of Pennsylvania

1

$66,104

New York University

2

$60,438

University of Michigan

3

$57,273

University of Texas at Austin

4

$41,070

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

5

$60,156

University of California, Berkeley

6

$48,465

Boston College

7

$67,680

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

8

$39,338

Carnegie Mellon University

9

$63,829

Indiana University

10

$40,482

To be sure, college rankings from U.S. News have become a hot-button topic in the education industry in recent years. Some schools, including Columbia University, stopped sharing undergraduate data with U.S. News.

Also see: The U.S. News college rankings for 2024 are out. Why does anyone care?

Any school that says it won’t participate in the rankings does not necessarily remove it from future U.S. News rankings, however. Columbia University was 12th in the overall college rankings this year, for example, while not sharing its data.

And dozens of medical and law schools pulled out of the rankings in recent years, including Yale and Harvard.

In response to some criticism over its rankings, U.S. News updated its methodology this year to include items such as first generation graduation rates and first generation graduation rate performance. The rankings dropped acceptance rate as a metric a few years ago.

U.S. News did not immediately respond to MarketWatch’s request for comment.

The college rankings come as millions of U.S. student loan borrowers are preparing to resume payments after a multi-year pause. Borrowers with federally managed student loans will likely have bills due sometime in October — interest already began accruing on Sept. 1.

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