Page 1 of 1
Economics background necessary for law school?
Posted: Mon Apr 15, 2013 11:13 am
by lawschoolwoohoo
I went to a liberal arts school where econ was not required. Now I'm thinking I may need it for contracts or corporations. I'm going to law school in the fall, should I maybe get a book or something to try and learn something about the economy? I'm a K-JDer humanities major so I'm pretty much an idiot on how any of it works. Or will law school teach me everything I need to know about it? Suggestions?
Re: Economics background necessary for law school?
Posted: Mon Apr 15, 2013 11:15 am
by buddingjd
no need - half of my law and econ class didn't know what utility was.
Re: Economics background necessary for law school?
Posted: Mon Apr 15, 2013 11:17 am
by mephistopheles
it would make things a lot clearer for you in some classes if you did have an economics background.
plus, thinking of things in terms of externalities and game theory and what not is a huge plus.
Re: Economics background necessary for law school?
Posted: Mon Apr 15, 2013 11:43 am
by El Principe
Not at all.
Re: Economics background necessary for law school?
Posted: Mon Apr 15, 2013 11:46 am
by toothbrush
to bandwagon post - can anyone recommend BASIC econ reading that gives you enough of an understanding for the classes that may dabble into economics ?
Re: Economics background necessary for law school?
Posted: Mon Apr 15, 2013 11:50 am
by guano
toothbrush wrote:to bandwagon post - can anyone recommend BASIC econ reading that gives you enough of an understanding for the classes that may dabble into economics ?
Just look at whatever your school's 101 Econ class recommends, borrow it from the library, and skim it.
That being said, it doesn't help that much re law school
Re: Economics background necessary for law school?
Posted: Mon Apr 15, 2013 11:51 am
by toothbrush
guano wrote:toothbrush wrote:to bandwagon post - can anyone recommend BASIC econ reading that gives you enough of an understanding for the classes that may dabble into economics ?
Just look at whatever your school's 101 Econ class recommends, borrow it from the library, and skim it.
That being said, it doesn't help that much re law school
alright thanks. whenever this topic comes up on tls there is always a handful of people who say that economics was the major they should have studied because of how much it is req in law school. guess not though.
Re: Economics background necessary for law school?
Posted: Mon Apr 15, 2013 11:51 am
by stillwater
toothbrush wrote:guano wrote:toothbrush wrote:to bandwagon post - can anyone recommend BASIC econ reading that gives you enough of an understanding for the classes that may dabble into economics ?
Just look at whatever your school's 101 Econ class recommends, borrow it from the library, and skim it.
That being said, it doesn't help that much re law school
alright thanks. whenever this topic comes up on tls there is always a handful of people who say that economics was the major they should have studied because of how much it is req in law school. guess not though.
yea, listen to batshit. he's got his fingers on the pulse of America.
Re: Economics background necessary for law school?
Posted: Tue Apr 16, 2013 12:08 pm
by M458
Not sure how useful or necessary it is in law school as I'm a 0L, but if you're really curious about it, go here:
https://www.khanacademy.org/library
Scroll down to the Microeconomics and watch a few videos. You can also take an intro level Econ class via Coursera.
Re: Economics background necessary for law school?
Posted: Thu May 16, 2013 8:31 pm
by USMCMatt
Only if George Mason is on your list...not necessary, but it will help.
Re: Economics background necessary for law school?
Posted: Thu May 16, 2013 8:43 pm
by tomwatts
There are a few topics that tend to come up that you will have seen before if you know econ, the most prominent being the economically rational choice. Some of the "reasonable person" stuff that appears most prominently in Torts can be phrased in terms of economically rational calculations. (The Hand formula.) But the central stuff of introductory micro — supply and demand curves, equilibrium, comparative statics, social surplus — is pretty much beside the point for 1L law.
Having a general sense of the central results — competition is good, transactions are good under ideal conditions, etc. — may be useful for some of Contracts, depending on your prof, and some of the upper-level classes may involve this stuff a bit more.
That said, you can probably learn all of it as it comes up in class without ever having dealt with econ before. Econ isn't a prerequisite, just something that may help occasionally in interpreting a point or two. Philosophy is the same way, really: it's likely to come up a little bit in Criminal Law, depending on your prof. Knowing a little about Kant may help you understand objections to utilitarian deterrence theory.
Re: Economics background necessary for law school?
Posted: Thu May 16, 2013 8:58 pm
by Br3v
People come to law school with a lot of different backgrounds, many of which don't include econ.
Maybe read up on the Coase theorem or something else econ/law like if you are interested. I wouldn't do it to fill an expected void of knowledge or something though, just read up on it if you are interested.
Re: Economics background necessary for law school?
Posted: Fri May 17, 2013 12:08 am
by Bronck
Lol no bro
Re: Economics background necessary for law school?
Posted: Fri May 17, 2013 1:04 am
by HankBashir
toothbrush wrote:to bandwagon post - can anyone recommend BASIC econ reading that gives you enough of an understanding for the classes that may dabble into economics ?
Principles of Economics by Mankiw is the general intro book used around the country.
Re: Economics background necessary for law school?
Posted: Fri May 17, 2013 1:05 am
by Ded Precedent
Know that Pareto efficiency.
Re: Economics background necessary for law school?
Posted: Fri May 17, 2013 4:49 pm
by Jsa725
.
Re: Economics background necessary for law school?
Posted: Fri May 17, 2013 7:46 pm
by dixiecupdrinking
Extremely basic microecon principles are very useful for law school. You don't need any specialized knowledge by any means, but it helps to be comfortable thinking in terms of economic incentives — if you impose a penalty on an activity, what effect will it have on the amount of that activity taking place, simple things like that. I would actually recommend doing some basic "economics for dummies" type general reading if you've never taken a course in it. Judges have become so schooled in the Chicago model of thinking about law in (often very basic and flawed) economic terms that it's useful to be able to be on the same page.
Re: Economics background necessary for law school?
Posted: Fri May 17, 2013 7:56 pm
by Bronte
No, you can do just fine with a liberal arts degree, which is what most of your peers will have. I would say that, if anything, a business and finance background is more helpful, at least at a practical level. Especially on the transactional side, much of what big law firms do is finance related. Likewise, in classes like corporations, securities regulation, and secured transactions, it helps to understand the basics of capital structure and capital markets. But again it's by no means necessary.