A high performance, open source Python code library for economics
from quantecon.markov import DiscreteDP
aiyagari_ddp = DiscreteDP(R, Q, beta)
results = aiyagari_ddp.solve(method='policy_iteration')
Before installing quantecon
we recommend you install the Anaconda Python distribution, which includes a full suite of scientific python tools. Note: quantecon
is now only supporting Python version 3.5+. This is mainly to allow code to be written taking full advantage of new features such as using the @
symbol for matrix multiplication. Therefore please install the latest Python 3 Anaconda distribution.
Next you can install quantecon by opening a terminal prompt and typing
pip install quantecon
or using conda-forge by typing
conda install -c conda-forge quantecon
Once quantecon
has been installed you should be able to import it as follows:
import quantecon as qe
You can check the version by running
print(qe.__version__)
If your version is below what’s available on PyPI then it is time to upgrade. This can be done by running
pip install --upgrade quantecon
Many examples of QuantEcon.py in action can be found at Quantitative Economics. See also the
QuantEcon.py is supported financially by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation and is part of the QuantEcon organization.
An alternative is to download the sourcecode of the quantecon
package and install it manually from the github repository. For example, if you have git installed type
git clone https://github.com/QuantEcon/QuantEcon.py
Once you have downloaded the source files then the package can be installed by running
pip install flit
flit install
(To learn the basics about setting up Git see this link.)
QuantEcon.py is MIT licensed, so you are free to use it without any charge and restriction. If it is convenient for you, please cite QuantEcon.py when using it in your work and also consider contributing all your changes back, so that we can incorporate it.
A BibTeX entry for LaTeX users is
@article{10.21105/joss.05585,
author = {Batista, Quentin and Coleman, Chase and Furusawa, Yuya and Hu, Shu and Lunagariya, Smit and Lyon, Spencer and McKay, Matthew and Oyama, Daisuke and Sargent, Thomas J. and Shi, Zejin and Stachurski, John and Winant, Pablo and Watkins, Natasha and Yang, Ziyue and Zhang, Hengcheng},
doi = {10.5281/zenodo.10345102},
title = {QuantEcon.py: A community based Python library for quantitative economics},
year = {2024},
journal = {Journal of Open Source Software},
volume = {9},
number = {93},
pages = {5585}
}