Note that there was at least one poster in engineering who disliked engineering applicants from college who did a lot of business courses or second majors in business, as that poster’s experience was that such hires tended to be less committed to engineering and wanted an express path to management, which is not what that poster wanted to hire. Note that many experienced people in engineering and computing do eventually go to management without needing any kind of business degree.
Such a viewpoint may or may not be common in computing, but be aware that a second major in business has at least the possibility of being a negative as well as positive signal for some jobs and employers. A second major or substantial course work in business may be more likely to be a positive if aiming for jobs in computing for business functions (finance, accounting, HR, etc.) where knowledge of the application of computing may help.
Some business or business-adjacent social science courses (e.g. financial economics, sociology of work) may still be worth taking, even if you do not add a second major in business because you want to avoid the possibility of a negative signal or just want more space to add more technical courses or free electives.