Easily create interactive applications that pull in your data or ours, perform standardized or custom analysis, and generate reports automatically—all in one system, with one integrated workflow.
The Mathematica economics solution includes sophisticated statistics and optimization tools alongside unique capabilities like built-in data sources, instant interactivity, advanced differential equation solving, and the reliability of a mixed symbolic-numeric approach to computation.
Easily building interactive applications to analyze economic models
Dynamically exploring the cost and revenue situation in a monopoly and in perfect competition
Building advanced mathematical models for shaping economic policy
Optimizing tax structure by examining the effects of marginal rate increases on tax revenues
Analyzing country statistics using built-in data
Visualizing the population and GDP figures over time for any country
Compare Mathematica to your current tools. Do they have these advantages?
Built-in current and historical financial, socioeconomic, and other data ready for computation without preprocessing Competitor note: Built-in data combined with high-powered computation is unique to Mathematica
Complete workflow, from data import to analysis to interactive document or slide show, in one system Competitor note: R, GAUSS, Minitab, and other software do not support a complete workflow in a single environment
Powerful symbolic statistical computation and built-in functions for all standard statistical distributions Competitor note: R, STATA, and other numerical systems do not include symbolic functionality
Seamless integration of numerics, symbolics, interactive graphics, and all other computational aspects in one document Competitor note: Unique to Mathematica
KEY CAPABILITIES
WHY CHOOSE MATHEMATICA
WAYS TO USE
Instantly creating interactive applications to study economic behavior
Running fast, efficient large-scale simulations for cash flow testing and other applications
Generating computational agent-based models of dynamic economic systems
Detecting and visualizing chaotic behavior in macroeconomic time-series data