"The number of majors is immaterial -- I am at a place where we graduate very few majors, but given the number of "service" courses we provide in the business major, eliminating us is unthinkable. To the poster from USM - so how will the USM businees undergrads get their econ principles courses. How is all this playing out in terms of accreditation?"
It's indeed a question of metric. Dean and Provost keep mentioning the low number of pure econ grads, economists and now the senate use a different measure:
In the Fall of 2008,
Number of full-time faculty at USM was 743.
Number of full-time faculty in the USM College of Business was 74.
Number of full-time economics faculty in CoB was 11.
Source: USM Institutional Research, USM 2008-2009 Fact Book,
http://www.usm.edu/ir/pdfs/fact_books/2008_09/21_faculty_staff_08.pdf
Number of SCH generated by USM full-time faculty was 131,544.5.
Number of SCH generated by the USM College of Business full-time
faculty was 20,312.
Number of SCH generated by the USM CoB full-time Economics faculty was 3,750.
Source: USM Institutional Research, Faculty and Staff Reports, Faculty
Work Load, Fall 2008,
http://www.usm.edu/ir/pdfs/faculty_staff/LOAD_STUDY_4091.pdf
Thus,
USM generated 131,544.5/743 = 177 SCH/FTE
College of Business-wide SCH/FTE was 20,312/74 = 274 SCH/FTE.
The economics faculty generated 3,750/11 = 341 SCH/FTE.
Note also that the non-econ CoB actually only generated
(20,312-3,750)/(74-11) = 263 SCH/FTE, making econ about 30% more
productive than their CoB colleagues.
Bottom line, econ may not be a sacred cow, but it sure is a cash cow. Thus to argue that cutting econ would save money goes beyond stupidity.
I'm not sufficiently informed on the issue of re-accreditation, but it's certainly a good question to ask.