Got this from Wikipedia about destinations for undergrads:
'Over 50% of Wharton's typical undergraduate class of 500 students go into investment banking with the majority employed at a bulge bracket firm earning a typical base salary of $70,000, a typical signing bonus of $10,000, and a year-end bonus for first year analysts as high as $100,000.[13][14][15][16][17][18] The next most common industry after investment banking is consulting, with firms like McKinsey & Co., Boston Consulting Group, Bain & Company and many other firms hiring approximately 30% of the students. A number of students also enter the buy-side with offers from top hedge funds such as Citadel LLC or private equity firms such as Silver Lake Partners or Blackstone Group.[15] A number of students, particularly those in the M&T Program, enter the technology industry with offers from employers such as Google and Microsoft.'
LSE in no way can match this.
Lol, being negged by LSE fanboys it seems. I'm not hating on LSE, all I'm saying is that Wharton statistically will set you in a better stead for applying to those industries. Part of this is down to the nature of Wharton's course (it's a lot more business/career orientated than LSE Maths and Econ) and its exclusivity (only 500 Wharton grads each year instead of 1000's of LSE grads)