Quantum Technology for Economists
Isaiah Hull, Or Sattath, Eleni Diamanti, G\"oran Wendin

TL;DR
This paper introduces quantum technology concepts to economists, focusing on quantum computing and quantum money, and reviews quantum speedups relevant to economic modeling and analysis.
Contribution
It provides an accessible overview of quantum computing and money for economists, highlighting potential speedups and addressing misconceptions in the field.
Findings
Quantum money offers privacy and efficiency advantages.
Multiple quantum speedups have been identified for economic algorithms.
Challenges remain in achieving practical quantum speedups.
Abstract
Research on quantum technology spans multiple disciplines: physics, computer science, engineering, and mathematics. The objective of this manuscript is to provide an accessible introduction to this emerging field for economists that is centered around quantum computing and quantum money. We proceed in three steps. First, we discuss basic concepts in quantum computing and quantum communication, assuming knowledge of linear algebra and statistics, but not of computer science or physics. This covers fundamental topics, such as qubits, superposition, entanglement, quantum circuits, oracles, and the no-cloning theorem. Second, we provide an overview of quantum money, an early invention of the quantum communication literature that has recently been partially implemented in an experimental setting. One form of quantum money offers the privacy and anonymity of physical cash, the option to…
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