photo Harvard University - Economics Department

Study Abroad Information

Here's what you need to do if you think you might be interested in study abroad:

  1. Think hard about whether you want to study abroad and what you hope to get out of it. Think about where you might want to study.

  2. Think about whether you would like to or need to  get credit for an economics course while abroad. Study abroad need not disrupt your academic schedule at all if you have prepared well-- you can get credit for one economics course, as well as Core credit. (If you study abroad for one semester and take a full semester of course work, then you automatically reduce your Core requirement by one; for a full year, you reduce your Core requirement by two!) On the other hand, you will have more options if you don't need to get any credit for economics courses -- there are some programs that are more of a fully cultural experience, for example, rather than just studying at an overseas university. If that's what you're interested in, you may want to plan your schedule so as to fulfill your economics requirements with Harvard courses.

  3. Visit the Office for International Programs (OIP) at their new address, 77 Dunster Street.   They will help you figure out where you want to study and how to apply. Some possible programs for economics concentrators are posted on the OIP website. Application for study abroad are now done online through the Studio Abroad web application.  The staff at OIP can familiarize you with the various steps you need to go through using this online application. You may enter the Studio Abroad web tool with your HUID and PIN at http://studyabroad.fas.harvard.edu/index.cfm?FuseAction=Security.Login

  4. During the summer months, email Jeff Miron. During the school year, all official cocentration advisors (located in Littauer 111) are qualified to give advise and approve study abroad courses for concentration credit.  The Economics department will only approve ONE course for concetration credit during any term abroad.  Once you have applied and been accepted to a program, please bring the syllabi of the course/s you wish to have considered for concentration credit to a concentration advisor in Littuaer 111. They will let you know whether that course can count and submit department approval through Studio Abroad when you meet.  Your course plan is tentative at this stage. Many students change their course plan while abroad--that's ok. For students who are abroad, OIP, Jeff, and/or your concentration advisor can approve credit for course changes through the Studio Abroad application.

Note: Grades for courses taken abroad are not recorded on your Harvard transcript and do not count toward College or concentration GPA. It is noted whether you pass or fail the course, and you only get credit for courses you pass. However, courses taken abroad do not count toward the limit of two P/F courses that may fulfill economics concentration requirements.

To count as an economics elective, a course must:

  • Have substantial economic content
  • Employ primarily an economic methodology (i.e., use the tools from intro and intermediate economics, not primarily case studies, interviews, etc.)
  • Have mostly readings with economic content and economic methodology

For the most part, any course that sounds pretty much like a course you could take at Harvard (e.g., game theory, econometrics, international monetary economics, etc.) would count, as long as the course is not taught at a much lower level. However, it is great to take advantage of being abroad by taking unique courses, such as The Spanish Economy, Economic History of Latin America, or The Economics of the EU. These will count, as long as they meet the above criteria.

You can get prerequisite credit for a course if it counts as an economics elective and prerequires intermediate microeconomics or intermediate macroeconomics.

You can get writing credit for a course if it counts as an economics elective and requires a 15+ page research paper. To get writing credit, show Jeff or your concentration advisor the graded paper when you return to Harvard. As long as the paper has substantial economic content and employs primarily an economic methodology, you will get credit.

 

You cannot get credit for Ec 970 while abroad. Sophomores who study abroad in the spring must postpone Ec 970 until junior spring.

The economics concentration does not grant credit for internships.


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