Economics

School of Economics

Regional finance, logistics, entrepreneurship, circular bioeconomy, and responsible growth.

Faculty profile

Programs, studios, and labs are organized around evidence students can defend.

Students read logistics routes, balance sheets, municipal budgets, and climate-risk scenarios in the same project cycle.

Pathways4 policy studios
Featured courseECO-220 Regional Economics and Responsible Growth
Career signalspolicy analyst, finance associate, logistics planner, development consultant

Programs and labs

Academic routes inside Economics.

Program

Regional Economics

Students combine faculty coursework with methods training, advising, and a partner-facing studio brief.

Program

Public Finance

Students combine faculty coursework with methods training, advising, and a partner-facing studio brief.

Program

Logistics and Trade

Students combine faculty coursework with methods training, advising, and a partner-facing studio brief.

Program

Sustainable Enterprise

Students combine faculty coursework with methods training, advising, and a partner-facing studio brief.

Lab

Responsible Growth Studio

Faculty and students use this lab for applied research, public evidence, prototypes, or field-facing methods work.

Lab

Danube Corridor Finance Desk

Faculty and students use this lab for applied research, public evidence, prototypes, or field-facing methods work.

Lab

Circular Bioeconomy Clinic

Faculty and students use this lab for applied research, public evidence, prototypes, or field-facing methods work.

Advising

Start with a faculty home, then choose a problem to study deeply.

Faculty advisors help students connect core coursework, methods, research ethics, fieldwork, and career preparation without losing disciplinary depth.

  • Faculty advising from the first semester
  • Studio or lab work tied to regional evidence
  • Capstone planning with a named supervisor
  • Portfolio-ready outputs for graduate study or employment