fOR3V3RPINKKKK said:
But what job does your friends actually do? Accounting jobs or IT? If it is an accounting position if you think about it logically why would they hire them compared to someone who did an accounting degree. Maybe it is because they had a 'cultural fit'? In that case, it really had nothing to do with what degree they did.
I don't have a friend who is doing a commerce/engineering double degree, which is why I never referred to one. My friends mainly do com/eco, but that is irrelevant.
If you want an example of an accounting division, I can give you plenty. Take for example a current offer I have for summer vacation at PwC in Business Assurance. BA covers internal audits/IT audits/controls and processes and if you talk to a lot of the graduates they are actually engineering students. Basically this is an internal audit division, with much broader scope. Another example would be forensics and they also hire some engineers in this division.
From what a graduate told me yesterday "when you get to the firm, the managers assume you know shit and build you up from there". The skills you gain from university are ultimately more integral to job prospects than what you actually major in. I don't do the bread and butter Accounting/Finance but that doesn't hinder my prospects if I want to do Audit in Financial Services. Let's put it this way, everyone from graduates to partners have basically told me CA is hell and 10 times harder than Uni. If there is really that much of a gap, your university knowledge is inevitably going to become irrelevant.
No one is saying they will or will not hire an engineering student over an accounting student. However, why wouldn't they hire a combined accounting/eng student over a single degree student?
At a graduate level, I see no reason why you wouldn't be at least marginally more attractive - you effectively invested in more human capital than your counterparts. The main draw back is whether or not the pay and experienced lost in the long run is worth the initial benefit.
*Also, why did you do Liberal Studies? All the stuff I've done in Liberal Studies so far has basically no effect on my business knowledge of skills - yet we decided to stay an extra year? Obviously we derived some sort of benefit or utility would result from the additional year.