Business student

Business student usually refers to a person who obtained a university degree in Business Administration. Graduates obtain degree in Business Administration usually with a major in general management, finance, accounting, marketing or strategy. Students graduating with such a degree usually start their careers in the business world. Students may get business degrees at an undergraduate, graduate, or doctorate level.

The US education systems awards bachelor's degrees after four years of university which can be followed by the post graduate Master of Business Administration degree. The European system, after the Bologna process, recognizes the 3 years Bachelor degrees, which can be followed by the Master of Science/Arts degrees, after which one can obtain a post graduate Master of Business Administration degree.

Types of Business Students

Students can get business degrees at an undergraduate, graduate, or doctorate level. At an Undergraduate level, degrees are usually in management, finance, accounting, marketing, or strategy. Other degrees, such as supply chain management, operations, management information systems, and economics are also sometimes conspired business degrees. At a graduate level, students can earn a Masters in Business in Business Administration.[1]

Demographics

Business students are the most common students at schools, with roughly 20% of all undergraduate degrees in the U.S. being business degrees. Business students are primarily male, with breakdowns in 2011 of 56.4%(male)-43.6%(female) at the undergraduate level.[1] At all levels of study, white students are the most common, followed by Hispanic, Black, and American Indian Students.[2] Business students are primarily found in the United States, although programs are offered across the globe.[1]

Students who major in Business Administration can expected a starting salary in the ballpark of $43,500, and a mid-career salary around $71,00. Those students who chose to study a specific business degree can generally expect higher salaries, for example:

  • Finance - $49,200
  • Supply Chain Management - $52,000
  • Account - $45,300
  • Marketing Management - $42,100[3]

A study done in 2002 on business students in the United States revealed that the average family income for business students are as follows:

< $25,000: 19.7% of students

$25,001-$50,000: 29.7% of students

$50,001-$75,000: 20.4% of students

$75,001-$100,000: 16.4% of students

> $100,000: 13.8% of students [4]

gollark: Not really, that's hyperbolic, sorry.
gollark: Also the Krist v2 server is broken.
gollark: Krist as it stands does have some problems though, and in this I agree with Terra - there are a few people who had good GPUs and went in early when the block value was *fifty times* what it is now who own most of the economy.
gollark: I mean, I find that lots of people are willing to sell to me directly at really low prices if I actually ask directly.
gollark: There's only, what, one sell shop around, and there are large differences between buy/sell prices.

References

  1. "AACSB Business School Data Trends". AACSB. AACSB. 2013. Archived from the original on 2014-08-19. Retrieved 2015-10-10.
  2. "U.S. Minority Student – Faculty Ratios Remain High". AACSB Data and Research Blog. Retrieved 2015-10-11.
  3. "Majors That Pay You Back - 2013-2014 College Salary Report". www.payscale.com. Retrieved 2015-10-12.
  4. Kim, David; Markham, F. Scott; Cangelosi, Joseph D. (2002-09-01). "Why Students Pursue the Business Degree: A Comparison of Business Majors Across Universities". Journal of Education for Business. 78 (1): 28–32. doi:10.1080/08832320209599694. ISSN 0883-2323.


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