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! :)
I went from the MPhil in Development Studies straight to an Econ PhD, and I know a few other scattered cases, though it was a long time ago so I'm not sure if that path would work these days, and it was pretty unusual even then. It may be doable depending on your undergrad coursework and where you're aiming - admissions committees care a lot more about having a math background than they care about having an econ background.
Question: are you looking to continue on to a PhD later, or go to the international organization / non-profit sector, or something else? For most work in international development you don't need a PhD and the MPhil would work just fine to get you in the door.
I wouldn't assume the MPP would significantly help you get into the MPhil in Economics. And if you're set on some kind of second master's after the MPP, but not after the MPhil in Development Studies, the opportunity cost of delaying your career by 2 years would be much higher than the difference in the course costs.
Understood, thanks so much for the advice!