Hey everyone!
I'm an undergrad really passionate about global health and development, which is probably what I'm going to make my life's work. I've just received two offers for master's degrees and could really use some advice on which option would be best!
- MPhil in Development Studies from the University of Oxford. Two years, £25,000/year - https://www.ox.ac.uk/admissions/graduate/courses/mphil-development-studies
- Master of Public Policy at the University of Tokyo. Also two years, but only £5000/year - https://www.pp.u-tokyo.ac.jp/en/mppip/
When I was applying I figured it was a no-brainer to just go for Oxford just because of how good the university is, but recently I've been wondering whether I should study at Tokyo and basically use it as an economics conversion course, to then go on and study a second master's degree in economics (especially since the MPP is so cheap by master's degree standards)? My current degree isn't quantitative which is why I can't apply to an economics one right now.
Would that be worthwhile? It seems like a lot of the most impactful tools in development come from economics, so I’m thinking the extra two years studying could be worth it. But I’d really appreciate hearing from people with experience in global health and development - would this path make sense, or is it better to just go straight to Oxford now instead of later? (Assuming I get in again later.)
Thanks so much for any advice! :)
Echoing what Eva said, I think you should consider waiting a year then apply for IDE / applied econ masters. An IDE program is probably the right fit given your goals, but I don't know any beyond Yale's IDE which expects you to already have worked in development first.
For Applied Econ, I like University of Maryland's Applied Economics Master's program. The program only requires Calc I and is very transparent about what it can do. Dev / global health placements, content, and networking will take a huge hit compared to IDE programs though.
You can use the year in the workforce to save money and take online classes on the side. Believe me, you'll want the savings. Development and global health can be financially tough in early career.
In general, the econ and math background required isn't too high for these type of real-world Master's degrees. Working + getting good grades in first-semester calculus, first-semester probability and stats, intermediate micro, and intermediate macro may be enough for admission.