
BA (Hons) Statistics vs BSc Data Science: Who should choose? Career prospects and more
— Prof. Pushkar Shah
With data powering decisions across industries, from finance and healthcare to e-commerce and public policy, students often struggle with choosing Statistics or Data Science. While both speak the language of numbers, they approach the problem with different purposes.
A BA in Statistics will offer a strong mathematical foundation with a focus on probability, inference, mathematical modelling, and hypothesis testing. It requires rigorous training and analytical skills. Graduates often pursue master's and doctorates and go on to pick up roles in think tanks, government services, public policy, market research, and academia. These also lead to advanced careers in economics and quantitative fields.
BA (Hons) Economics vs BCom (Hons): Which degree will offer a gateway to business & policy?
In contrast, a B.Sc. in Data Sciences blends statistics with programming. The emphasis is on coding, data wrangling, machine learning, and visualisation. Students essentially learn how to handle large, real-world data, and apply models to solve business problems – skills which are highly valued by startups, tech firms, consulting, and digital-first companies.
Though both these streams deal with numbers, the career prospects follow different trajectories. Headhunters looking for model builders in research or forecasting often look out for statistics graduates. Whereas, data science roles such as data engineers, data scientists, business analysts, etc., demand more coding fluency and an applied mindset.
BA Maths (Hons), BCom Maths (Hons) or BSc Maths (Hons): Which one should you choose?
In India, the recent emphasis on developing newer technologies and applied services has raised the demand for both streams. Traditional sectors such as banking, insurance, and government look out for statistics graduates. The surge in digital transformation and the use of AI and GenAI in mainstream industry has driven the demand for data science talent across upcoming tech corridors.
If you enjoy mathematical logic, abstract thinking, and are just curious to identify patterns in data at a basal level, then statistics is your path. If you enjoy being a trouble shooter, using code, and building data solutions, then data science is a more natural fit.
BA (Hons) History or BA (Hons) Political Science: Which one should a student choose
Ultimately, both will lead to the same destination, using data to make sense of how the world around you works. What matters is where you'd like to begin.
(The author is an Associate Professor of Practice, Analytics at Great Lakes Institute of Management, Chennai)
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Indian Express
an hour ago
- Indian Express
Digital arrest scam: Consumer panel sends notices to banks, flags service ‘deficiencies'
Digital arrests have reached the doorstep of the national consumer commission. For the first time, a clutch of banks have received notices from the National Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission which has flagged that victims of digital arrest fraud have been subjected to 'deficiencies in service.' The petitions filed by digital arrest victims were admitted in an order dated March 3 and on July 7. The banks' replies were heard by the NCDRC bench that included the commission's President, Justice (retired) AP Sahi, and member Bharatkumar Pandya. The NCDRC bench has said that it would consider seeking assistance of Central Government agencies like the Financial Intelligence Unit (FIU) and the Home Ministry's Indian Cyber Crime Coordination Centre (I4C) should it be decided that the complaints were 'maintainable' before the commission. The petitions of two Gurugram victims — who had lost Rs 10.30 crore and Rs 5.85 crore — in digital arrest scams last year were clubbed together for the NCDRC case; a third case from Mumbai will also be heard at the next hearing, fixed for November 14. Mahendra Limaye, the lawyer for all the three victims, said the Mumbai victim had lost a sum of Rs 5.88 crore after facing digital arrest last year. Limaye told The Indian Express, 'What is significant is that the Consumer Commission bench has sent notices to all banks in the chain of the digital arrest cases, including the beneficiary banks. The allegations of violation of guidelines of the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) and the deficiency of services will now be heard in detail by the Commission which is a first for the banking sector…' The orders make clear that the issue of whether digital arrest pleas fall within the definition of a 'consumer complaint'' and what would be the 'pecuniary jurisdiction' for entertaining such complaints are the two issues which will be heard. In its March 3 order, the NCDRC bench has stated that the allegations they were examining was how 'customer diligence was clearly compromised' and that 'RBI guidelines were blatantly violated and no customer protection care was taken.' The order added: 'The guidelines for checking unauthorized electronic banking transactions are governed by circulars and it appears that the accounts in which the amounts have been transferred by the complainants, those accounts were maintained seemingly without taking any precautions and no alerts or red flags were raised by any of the Banks in the background that the transactions were all suspicious for huge amounts…' Among the banks which have been sent notices and several of which were represented during the July 7 hearing are: ICICI Bank, HDFC Bank, UCO Bank, Federal Bank, Sreenivasa Padmavathi Bank, Yes Bank, State Bank of India and Kotak Mahindra Bank. As reported in an investigative series in The Indian Express in June and July, the number of digital arrest frauds in India had jumped up to 1,23,672 cases in 2024 with an amount of Rs 1,935 crore being swindled from the victims. The case of one of the Gurugram victims — who is now before the NCDRC and had lost Rs 5.85 crore — was investigated to show how from her bank account, the money was moved by fraudsters to 141 accounts located all over the country in three layers of transactions. The amounts were withdrawn sometimes within seconds and minutes of being deposited from one bank to another. The fact that a single fictitious or mule account was used for multiple cyber frauds was also highlighted. Ritu Sarin is Executive Editor (News and Investigations) at The Indian Express group. Her areas of specialisation include internal security, money laundering and corruption. Sarin is one of India's most renowned reporters and has a career in journalism of over four decades. She is a member of the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) since 1999 and since early 2023, a member of its Board of Directors. She has also been a founder member of the ICIJ Network Committee (INC). She has, to begin with, alone, and later led teams which have worked on ICIJ's Offshore Leaks, Swiss Leaks, the Pulitzer Prize winning Panama Papers, Paradise Papers, Implant Files, Fincen Files, Pandora Papers, the Uber Files and Deforestation Inc. She has conducted investigative journalism workshops and addressed investigative journalism conferences with a specialisation on collaborative journalism in several countries. ... Read More


Economic Times
6 hours ago
- Economic Times
Wage hikes a priority for TCS; focus on growth with profitability: CFO
Agencies Delivering wage hikes for its over 6 lakh employees is a "priority" for TCS, the country's largest IT services company's Chief Financial Officer (CFO) Samir Seksaria has said. Speaking to PTI, after the release of the June quarter results, where the business witnessed headwinds on growth and margins, Seksaria made it clear that TCS will focus on growth with profitability. The company showed a 6 per cent increase in net on non-core income as demand got impacted due to macroeconomic and geopolitical troubles, and deferred its annual wage hikes that typically set in from April. Stating that TCS has rarely resorted to deferring wage hikes unlike peers, Seksaria said, "My priority is getting back to the wage hike." He, however, did not specify when the hikes will be delivered. Typically, the annual wage hikes crimp the operating profit margin by over 1.50 per cent, Seksaria said. It reported a 0.20 per cent narrowing in the number at 24.5 per cent for the June quarter, but Seksaria stressed that the intent is to push the margins up into the 26-28 per cent aspirational range. Seksaria explained that investments in upfront hiring to capture demand as it comes in hurt the margins, as lack of demand pulled down utilisation levels. As the company looks to widen the margins, it is grappling with a set of controllable and uncontrollable factors, Seksaria said, pointing out that upping the utilisation and other organisational tweaks are the controllables, while demand is the uncontrollable. "...demand recovery plus optimisation, we have to focus on both. If demand recovery is prolonged, we will double down on optimisation," he said. "Our focus will be growth with profitability. Only profitability without growth doesn't help," he said, adding that this should not be taken as the company giving up on demand. With attrition reaching some bit of concerning levels at 13.8 per cent, Seksaria said the focus will be to retain top talent as it is difficult to build by fresh hiring, and added that some bit of attrition is healthy and it may not take so many measures to retain some part of the talent. Given the fact that the company has capacity now, it may go slow on lateral hiring and restart once demand spurs up. The company does not plan to cut investments but there could be some realignment like building only a part of a structure on a plot, Seksaria said. TCS will not do acquisitions just for expanding the topline, but it will be capabilities that will drive such inorganic moves, Seksaria said, adding that it keeps looking at opportunities in the market. Elevate your knowledge and leadership skills at a cost cheaper than your daily tea. Markets need to see more than profits from Oyo As GenAI puts traditional BPO on life support, survival demands a makeover Is gold always the best bet? Think again Why this one from 'Dirty Dozen', now in Vedanta fold, is again in a mess Can Indian IT protect its high valuation as AI takes centre stage? F&O Radar| Deploy Bull Call Spread in Nifty for gains from volatility amid uptrend Aggressive? Yes, but better for investors with a risk appetite: 6 small private bank stocks with upside potential up to 36% in 1 year In mid-caps, 'just hold' often creates wealth: 10 mid-cap stocks from different sectors with upside potential up to 44%


Business Standard
7 hours ago
- Business Standard
Shekhar Gupta
Shekhar Gupta is a senior journalist and author. He is the founder and current editor-in-chief of ThePrint. He was awarded the Padma Bhushan in 2009. He writes a weekly column for the Business Standard, which appears every Saturday. He has had long stints at The Indian Express and India Today.