Subject guides / Development Economics

Development Economics

Also appears in programme titles as: Economics of Development · International and Development Economics

5 programmes mapped across 1 countriesScholarship compatibility checkedVerified Jul 2026 against official sources

What a development economics degree actually is

Why do some countries grow rich while their neighbours stay poor — and which policies actually change that? Development economics is the branch of economics built around this question, and its modern form is intensely empirical: randomised trials of cash-transfer programmes, natural experiments on schooling reforms, micro-data on how households survive shocks. A master's here is an economics degree first, with development as the application domain.

The names split along a real fault line. Oxford's Economics for Development and SOAS's Development Economics are economics degrees (econometrics-heavy); LSE's Economic Policy for International Development and Development Management sit closer to applied policy. The same two words in a different order can mean a different admissions bar and a different career — the programme map below spells out which is which.

What you study — and the quantitative bar

The economics-track programmes run macro, micro and econometrics cores at graduate level, then apply them: growth, trade, labour markets in poor countries, programme evaluation. The policy-track versions swap some theory for management, political economy and case work.

Be honest with yourself about the quantitative bar: Oxford and SOAS expect a strong economics or quantitative first degree, and graduate econometrics is unforgiving without it. If your background is public policy or social science, LSE's policy-flavoured routes are designed exactly for you — that is the single most common mismatch we see applicants make in this field.

Where it leads

This is the credential the international financial institutions actually hire against: World Bank and IMF entry programmes, regional development banks, J-PAL/IPA-style evaluation labs, finance ministries and central banks, and the economics teams of UN agencies. The evaluation skill set (causal inference, survey data) also travels into philanthropy and development consulting, where demand currently outruns supply.

Central Bank EconomistDevelopment EconomistDevelopment Finance SpecialistMonitoring & Evaluation Specialist

Who it suits — and who it does not

A good fit if you are…

  • Economics graduates from developing countries heading for their finance ministry, central bank or the World Bank system
  • Analysts in development agencies or NGOs who keep hitting the limits of their statistics training
  • Scholarship applicants: development economics is the closest thing to a universal funder priority — it is what JJ/WBGSP exists for

Probably not the right degree if…

  • Applicants without real mathematics — the economics-track cores assume calculus and statistics fluency
  • Those who want field practice and programme management rather than analysis: see International Development instead
  • Anyone chasing private-sector finance pay: this field's currency is influence, not bonuses

Where to study it: the programme map

Note the fault line in the titles below: "Economics for Development" and "Development Economics" are econometrics-heavy economics degrees; LSE's two applied programmes are policy degrees. Same words, different products — links and verification dates on every row.

UniversityOfficial programme titleLengthTuition (intl)Experience
London School of Economics and Political ScienceUnited KingdomMSc Economic Policy for International Development12 mo
London School of Economics and Political ScienceUnited KingdomMSc Development Management (Applied Development Economics)12 mo
London School of Economics and Political ScienceUnited KingdomMSc Development Studies12 mo
SOAS University of LondonUnited KingdomMSc Development Economics12 mo
University of OxfordUnited KingdomMSc in Economics for Development9 mo

Every row verified against the official programme page; oldest verification 15 Jul 2026. Nothing here is a paid placement.

Application strategy and funding routes

Decide track first, then school: economics-track (Oxford, SOAS) if you can clear the quantitative bar, policy-track (LSE's two applied programmes) if your strength is policy experience. Oxford's nine-month format is the fastest and, unusually for Oxford, fits every major scholarship length rule.

Funding here is the richest of any field we cover: the Joint Japan/World Bank programme funds exactly these degrees for developing-country nationals; Chevening covers all the 12-month UK options; Commonwealth Master's targets the same audience; DAAD's EPOS list carries several German development-economics courses. If you qualify for JJ/WBGSP, note its rule that you must already hold an unconditional admission before applying — sequence your university applications a full cycle ahead.

Which scholarship funds which programme

Computed from each scheme's published rules (destination, level, course length) — not a guarantee; list-based schemes still require checking the official list.

Chevening ScholarshipCommonly chosen by applicants
  • London School of Economics and Political Science
  • London School of Economics and Political Science
  • London School of Economics and Political Science
  • SOAS University of London
  • University of Oxford
Commonwealth Master's ScholarshipCommonly chosen by applicants
  • London School of Economics and Political Science
  • London School of Economics and Political Science
  • London School of Economics and Political Science
  • SOAS University of London
  • University of Oxford
DAAD EPOS (Development-Related Postgraduate Courses)Names this field a priority
  • London School of Economics and Political Sciencestudy destination outside the scheme
  • London School of Economics and Political Sciencestudy destination outside the scheme
  • London School of Economics and Political Sciencestudy destination outside the scheme
  • SOAS University of Londonstudy destination outside the scheme
  • University of Oxfordstudy destination outside the scheme
Joint Japan/World Bank Graduate Scholarship ProgramNames this field a priority
  • London School of Economics and Political Sciencedepends on the official participating list
  • London School of Economics and Political Sciencedepends on the official participating list
  • London School of Economics and Political Sciencedepends on the official participating list
  • SOAS University of Londondepends on the official participating list
  • University of Oxforddepends on the official participating list

Frequently asked questions

Development economics vs development studies — which should I choose?

Development economics is an economics discipline (models, econometrics, evaluation); development studies is interdisciplinary (politics, sociology, anthropology plus some economics). Choose by your strongest tool: if you can write regressions, economics opens more doors; if your strength is field and policy experience, development studies uses it better.

How much maths do I need?

For Oxford and SOAS: comfortable calculus, statistics and ideally prior econometrics. For LSE's applied-policy routes: solid quantitative literacy but not graduate-economics maths. No programme in our map admits students who avoid numbers entirely.

Which scholarship is built for this field?

The Joint Japan/World Bank Graduate Scholarship Program — it exists specifically to fund development-related master's degrees for developing-country nationals, through two application windows each spring. Chevening, Commonwealth and DAAD EPOS all fund it too.

Can this lead to a PhD?

Yes — the economics-track programmes are standard PhD feeders, and Oxford's EfD regularly sends graduates into doctoral programmes. The applied-policy tracks are practice degrees; moving to a PhD from them usually requires extra economics coursework.

Related fields

Sources

Official programme pages (linked per row above) · official scholarship rules and participating-programme lists · university admission regulations. Every data row records its source URL and verification date; stale rows are re-checked or removed.

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