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Hello, I have currently been accepted to the above programs with full funding. Given the financial support (stipend + health insurance + full tuition waiver) is pretty much the same between the three universities, where should I go? I am interested in development econ and labor econ. Thank you.
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I am an applicant for economics graduate program at Michigan State University. I called to administration office yesterday and also today, and they say that I will be able to know my final status —whether accepted or rejected— by emailing to them at night on April 15th. They said that they will reply to my email on April 16th. As far as I know, their behavior is a violation of a rule that they must inform the student`s status at least before April 15th? What kind of benefit can I get by reporting their violation to the USA graduate committee— a committee that regulates numerous graduate programs in the USA?
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Ok, I am going to do one of these. The pool of wisdom on this site is too valuable not to tap into. I want to study monetary/macro, and I have been accepted to Indiana, Vanderbilt, Purdue, Michigan State, and Iowa State, and I have been waitlisted at WUSTL. I really just want to get thoughts on the quality of each of these departments, specifically in monetary/macro (location is not an issue for me among these). My thoughts as of now: IU - great in macro, good program overall WUSTL - a little lower ranked but trending upward, strong in monetary Vanderbilt - positive trend, solid program Purdue - weak in macro, but they have Camera who is doing cool work in experimental monetary Iowa State - lower-ranked, but decent in monetary MSU - very strong in econometrics, weaker in macro Thanks for your thoughts!