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Dec 06, 2025
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2025-2026 Graduate Catalog
Master of Agribusiness (MAB)
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Return to: Agricultural Economics
An off-campus distance Master’s of Agribusiness (MAB) degree is offered through the Agricultural Economics Department for working professionals. The MAB program emphasizes the application of economic and management concepts to problems facing the agribusiness professional. The Master in Agribusiness program is designed for off-campus students who wish to continue full-time employment while pursuing the post-baccalaureate degree. The MAB program emphasizes the study of economic and agribusiness management concepts and their application to food and agricultural business situations. The curriculum focuses on current issues facing agribusiness managers while providing tools for making better decisions in the areas of risk management, logistics, financial management, strategic planning, agricultural resource, and trade policy, marketing, human resource management, and institutional changes within agriculture. Two one-week campus sessions are required during both the first and second year of the program.
For additional information and application materials please contact:
Allen Featherstone
Master’s of Agribusiness Program Director
Department of Agricultural Economics
Kansas State University
342 Waters Hall
Manhattan, KS 66506-4011
785-532-4441
Fax: 785-532-6925
E-mail: afeather@ksu.edu
Home Page: http://www.mab.ksu.edu/
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Course Requirements
The Master in Agribusiness degree requires the completion of 42 credit hours. The curriculum consists of a set of integrated management and economics topics, including 27 hours of agribusiness courses, 9 hours of business courses, and 6 hours of thesis. Students enter the program as a cohort and pace through the program together over a 30 month period.
Course requirements for the Master in Agribusiness are: Agribusiness courses (27 credit hours)
Business courses (9 credit hours)
Thesis hours (6 credit hours)
Total Hours Required for Master’s: 42
Note
The thesis involves the application of concepts and quantitative tools learned in course work to a firm-level agribusiness problem. The candidate is expected to take a final oral examination for the purpose of defending the thesis. |
Return to: Agricultural Economics
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