Name: Mohammed Ait Lahcen
Type: User
Company: Qatar University
Bio: I'm an Assistant Professor of Economics at Qatar University. My research focuses on macroeconomics and monetary economics.
Twitter: m_aitlahcen
Location: Doha, Qatar
Blog: maitlahcen.github.io
Mohammed Ait Lahcen's Projects
RSIT Workshop (Uni Tübingen) 2021
Repository for OSM Lab Boot Camp 2017
Repository of syllabi, lecture notes, Jupyter notebooks, code, and problem sets for OSM Lab Boot Camp 2018
Repository of syllabi, lecture notes, Jupyter notebooks, code, and problem sets for OSE Lab Boot Camp 2019
Workshops for the Central Bank of Chile
Computational Data Analytics for Economists
A Python version of Miranda and Fackler's CompEcon toolbox
Computational Economics Course 2020 by Kenneth Judd
ECON 815: Computational Methods for Economists
Copenhagen Summer School 2018 QuantEcon Workshop
Teaching materials
A quick intro to Cython for Python users who don't know C
Exploring the calculation of Doing Business rankings
For 'Economics Development II' PhD seminar at CUNY Graduate Center. (older site) Generates docs at:
Dept of Industry, Innovation and Science QuantEcon-RSE Workshop
Python Programming Code for Dynamic Stochastic General Equilibrium Modeling
A collection of Dynare models
Python 3.6 examples of using economic data APIs and working with economic microdata.
Slides for A Primer in Econometric Theory
📖An interactive companion to the well-received textbook 'Introduction to Econometrics' by Stock & Watson (2015)
Code for Economic Dynamics, Theory and Computation
Introduction to NumPy arrays
Fast Lane to Learning R!
This is a PhD course on financial frictions in macroeconomic models. This repository includes all the materials taught and is constantly updated
Notebooks for introduction to using Python for economics
2018 QuantEcon-RSE Honours Workshop
This repository contains all the material for a one-semester intermediate-macro course. No textbook required.
Material for the class Introduction to Python for Scientific Computing
Introductionary programming lectures