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Economics isn't just about spreadsheets and graphs—it's about understanding power, policy, and why governments make the choices they do. If you're considering economics as a degree, dreaming of LSE or UK universities, this episode cuts through the hype and shows you the real path. Meet Arjun Chaudhary: economics researcher at J-PAL, LSE master's graduate, and someone who lost his dream LSE offer, hit a 2.0 GPA, almost faced academic probation, and still found his way to one of the world's top economics programs. This is the unfiltered story of why choosing economics matters, what UK universities actually give you, and why your first plan failing might be the best thing that ever happened. If you're an IB student considering economics, exploring UK university options, or wondering if a non-linear path can still lead to top institutions—this episode is your mirror. 🎯 Key Takeaways (Watch & Read) 1️⃣ Economics opens doors that engineering or business alone cannot. An economics degree teaches you to think systematically about incentives, trade-offs, and causation—skills that work in finance, policy, journalism, research, and NGOs. It's the most versatile foundation for understanding how the world actually works. 2️⃣ UK universities (LSE, UCL, Warwick) are not just about rankings—they're about access to global networks. Arjun's LSE cohort included future UN workers, Latin American journalists, and EU policymakers. Where you study determines who you sit next to for a year—and that peer group compounds for your entire career. 3️⃣ Combining economics with policy, journalism, or another field makes you more valuable than a pure economist. Arjun's experiment with journalism at ET Prime at age 16 wasn't a distraction—it became foundational. Economics + journalism = policy analysis. Economics + psychology = behavioral economics. Choose your second skill strategically. 4️⃣ Taking 4 HL subjects to keep your "options open" is a trap. His "Parental Appeasement Program" (4 HLs to study physics/chemistry while doing economics) taught him that you can't negotiate with your parents by adding workload. You negotiate by being honest about what you actually want. 5️⃣ The COVID IB algorithm proved that exam scores are not destiny. A 42 predicted grade, a lost UCL offer, and an algorithm no one understands didn't define his future. What defined it was how he recovered, rebuilt, and eventually proved himself capable through university performance—not a single test. 6️⃣ A 2.0 GPA is survivable; a mental health crisis is not. His first semester at Toronto was a disaster—depression, confusion, late withdrawal from math, and almost academic probation. Recovery came through therapy, honest conversations, and focusing on "one class at 11 pm" instead of a perfect CGPA. 7️⃣ UK universities reward recovery and resilience, not just raw scores. When Arjun reapplied to LSE for his master's after rebuilding his Toronto GPA to 3.46+, the university cared more about his trajectory and motivation than his first-semester disaster. Admissions officers understand that you grow through struggle. 8️⃣ Economics + politics + comparative analysis is a career path, not just an academic interest. His LSE degree in comparative politics combined with economics training led directly to J-PAL (research organization focused on poverty alleviation). This intersection of fields is where high-impact policy work happens. 9️⃣ Parental expectations around careers (engineering vs. economics vs. finance) require persistent, respectful negotiation. His dad is an investment banker; Arjun chose economics and policy. The breakthrough wasn't one conversation—it was years of proving seriousness, delivering results, and eventually his father accepting and supporting the choice. 🔟 Your non-linear path to economics and policy is your competitive advantage. Unlike someone who goes straight from IB economics to university to a finance job, Arjun's detours through journalism, depression, rejection, and recovery taught him judgment, empathy, and real understanding of how systems work. In policy and research, that's invaluable. Choosing economics is choosing to understand the world systematically. Choosing a UK university is choosing a global peer group and a hub of policy influence. And choosing to keep going after rejection is choosing to become the kind of person who actually changes systems instead of just studying them. This episode is a mirror: Are you considering economics? Are you stuck between what your parents expect and what you actually want? Did you get rejected from your dream university? Then watch this and ask yourself—what's one thing about your path that you need to change from tomorrow? 💭 #Economics #EconomicsStudent #LSE #IBDP #IB #PolicyResearch #PublicPolicy #CareerJourney #StudentLife #MentalHealth #UniversityAdmissions #EconomicsCareer #ResearchCareer #ComparativePolitics #UCL #HigherLevel #CareerAdvice #EducationMatters #YoungProfessionals