A few brief comments:Super Pig said:As for actuary vs adv maths, I've heard some personal comments from the maths academics. To summarise, the only benefit of being an actuary is the high pay. It's a highly specialised discipline, so the job prospect is quite narrow. Due to the size of the Australian economy, the demand for actuaries is not high. There are only just over 1000 fully qualified actuaries in the whole country, and that's already sufficient to meet the demand of the market.
I've heard a story from a friend. A guy ranked 2nd in Macquarie actuarial studies failed to get a job after graduation due to lack of experience. The point from that is you need subtantial experience to gain the trust from your boss to handle the job.
Maths/stats on the other hand, gives a much broader view. In essence actuarial is probability theory (which is part of stats) focusing heavily on insurance and finance. Whereas in maths/stats, you learn all the genearl stuff so that you have the choice of getting into other directions as well (e.g. biostats and the biotech industry for that matter).
And of course you can go into the finance field with maths/stats. There is a new major at usyd called "financial maths/stats", which is offered entirely within the school of maths and stats. The maths taught in finance courses in the commerce faculty are essentially naive versions of the maths courses. They only tell you "what" and the some basic "how", whereas in maths you get the whole picture - the "how" and "why".
I've got another little fact that makes my point. An actuary lecturer at Macquarie uni is currently doing a maths PhD under the supervision of the head of the financial maths program at usyd school of maths. Actuarial is relying heavily on the maths/stats expertise. Hope that helps.
1. The (actuarial) pay varies and may not be "that" great.
2. Only one-third of actuarials work in traditional actuarial work - the other two thirds work elsewhere. It's not narrow in terms of job opportunities. Further although demand isn't great in Australia, it's huge in Asian countries.
3. Students aren't "ranked" in Actuarial Studies at Macquarie. Employers don't exclude hiring people without experience, it may have been for other reasons such as personality (no personality - you'll find it hard to find a job anywhere regardless).
4. Aside - Aren't people at uni to specialise, not just to learn "general stuff"?
5. Yes, Actuarial Studies is built on alot of mathematics/statistical theory.