--- dataset_info: features: - name: question dtype: string - name: answer dtype: float64 - name: program dtype: string - name: task dtype: string - name: context dtype: string splits: - name: train num_bytes: 306143 num_examples: 246 download_size: 144247 dataset_size: 306143 configs: - config_name: default data_files: - split: train path: data/train-* --- # Finance Fundamentals: Program Synthesis This dataset contains 246 quantative reasoning financial math word problems, using data sourced from: - [TatQA](https://arxiv.org/abs/2105.07624) - [ConvFinQA](https://arxiv.org/abs/2210.03849) Each question is annotated with both a numeric target solution, along with a python program containing the explicit steps to reach that solution. For more information, see the [BizBench paper.](https://aclanthology.org/2024.acl-long.452.pdf) ## Example ``` The market price of K-T-Lew Corporation's common stock is $60 per share, and each share gives its owner one subscription right. Four rights are required to purchase an additional share of common stock at the subscription price of $54 per share. If the common stock is currently selling rights-on, what is the theoretical value of a right? Answer to the nearest cent. ``` ``` stock_price = 60.0 rights_sub_price_per_share = 54.0 rights_per_share = 4 value = (stock_price - rights_sub_price_per_share) / (rights_per_share + 1) round(value, 2) ``` ``` 1.2 ``` ## Citation If you find this data useful, please cite: ``` @inproceedings{krumdick-etal-2024-bizbench, title = "{B}iz{B}ench: A Quantitative Reasoning Benchmark for Business and Finance", author = "Krumdick, Michael and Koncel-Kedziorski, Rik and Lai, Viet Dac and Reddy, Varshini and Lovering, Charles and Tanner, Chris", editor = "Ku, Lun-Wei and Martins, Andre and Srikumar, Vivek", booktitle = "Proceedings of the 62nd Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (Volume 1: Long Papers)", month = aug, year = "2024", address = "Bangkok, Thailand", publisher = "Association for Computational Linguistics", url = "https://aclanthology.org/2024.acl-long.452/", doi = "10.18653/v1/2024.acl-long.452", pages = "8309--8332", abstract = "Answering questions within business and finance requires reasoning, precision, and a wide-breadth of technical knowledge. Together, these requirements make this domain difficult for large language models (LLMs). We introduce BizBench, a benchmark for evaluating models' ability to reason about realistic financial problems. BizBench comprises eight quantitative reasoning tasks, focusing on question-answering (QA) over financial data via program synthesis. We include three financially-themed code-generation tasks from newly collected and augmented QA data. Additionally, we isolate the reasoning capabilities required for financial QA: reading comprehension of financial text and tables for extracting intermediate values, and understanding financial concepts and formulas needed to calculate complex solutions. Collectively, these tasks evaluate a model{'}s financial background knowledge, ability to parse financial documents, and capacity to solve problems with code. We conduct an in-depth evaluation of open-source and commercial LLMs, comparing and contrasting the behavior of code-focused and language-focused models. We demonstrate that the current bottleneck in performance is due to LLMs' limited business and financial understanding, highlighting the value of a challenging benchmark for quantitative reasoning within this domain." } ```