I can definitely help you out here.
If you do choose at do it at UNSW, there's 6 available double degrees you can do it with, or if you want, you can do it as a major without any double degree.
Commerce (4 years)
Comp Sci (4 years)
Economics (4 years)
Inf Sys (4 years)
Science (4 years)
Science - Advanced Math (5 years)
First year actuarial is all common subjects for everyone, so out of the 8 subjects you will do, there are 3 commerce subjects, 2 economics subjects, 2 maths subjects and 1 specific actuary subject. Personally, I love how diverse the course is, especially as you delve into a lot of different areas and have a variety of assessment tasks (for e.g financial report on business, coding assignment, video presentation, essays, etc). There is also group work as well (I'm not sure how you feel about it), which personally for me, was much better than in high school, where you would have a few guys not do anything for the assessment. Obviously because of the current pandemic and overall situation we are in, meeting new people will be much harder, but hopefully things ease up when you start uni and you'll have the luxury to be able to attend face-to-face
Macquarie University also offers Actuarial, and in fact, I think Macquarie is more renowned for its actuarial program. You'll have to do your own research on it as I don't have a clue how their program is structured, to be honest. Regardless, both will have amazing programs and I'm sure you will enjoy it.
In terms of job prospects outside university, there's a whole list. Some jobs include
- Accountant/Auditor
- Actuarial Analyst
- Asset Management Trainee
- Business Analyst
- Business Consultant
- Credit Analyst
- Cyber Security Analyst
- Customer Experience Officer
- Data Analyst
- Digital Innovation Officer
- Economist
- Financial Adviser
- Human Resource Consultant
- Insurance Analyst
- Investment Banker
- Marketing/Brand Manager
- Risk Assessment Officer
- Superannuation Adviser
- Strategist
- Tax Adviser
- Wealth Management Analyst
These are only a few of the many there are available (I got these from the UNSW Actuarial site); hope this helps