期刊名称:ECONOMICS-THE OPEN ACCESS OPEN-ASSESSMENT E-JOURNAL
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ISSN: | 1864-6042
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出版频率: | Continuous publication
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出版社: | WALTER DE GRUYTER GMBH, GENTHINER STRASSE 13, BERLIN, GERMANY, D-10785
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期刊网址: | http://www.economics-ejournal.org/
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影响因子: |
0.46(2015年)
0.644(2014年)
0.307(2013年)
0.491 (2012年)
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| 主题范畴: | ECONOMICS |
期刊简介(About the journal)
投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)
编辑部信息(Editorial Board)
About the journal
economics is a new type of academic journal in economics. By involving a large research community in an innovative public peer review process, economics aims to provide fast access to top-quality papers. Modern communication technologies are used to find for every research issue the best virtual team out of a network of highly motivated researchers from all over the world. Thus, publishing is seen as a cooperative enterprise between authors, editors, referees, and readers. economics offers open access to all readers and takes the form of an e-journal, i.e. submission, evaluation, and publication are electronic.
economics embodies the following principles:
Open Access: Following the principle that knowledge is a public good, all readers have open access to reading and downloading papers. The simple and free access ensures maximum readership and high citation records for published papers.
Open Assessment: The traditional peer review process is substantially supplemented by a public peer review process in which the community of active researchers from all over the world has a hand in the evaluation process. Due to interactive peer review and public discussion, economics provides fast and efficient quality assurance. Within a two stage publication process, much of the research evaluation takes place after rather than before an article is published. Prizes for the most outstanding papers in special fields are awarded.
Speed: Submitted papers that have been identified as sufficiently promising for a referee process are made available on the journal’s homepage within three weeks. Thus, the time for new ideas to find their way into the scientific community is substantially reduced.
Add-on Services: To foster scientific exchange, economics embeds forums on special themes, where authors and readers can communicate and possibly conduct joint research. In addition, interested readers can take advantage of alert services announcing new papers in their fields. As far as possible, economics also provides hyperlinks to the referenced literature.
Style and Contents
economics aims to cover all the main areas of economics. Inevitably, articles in different areas of economics are addressed at different audiences. Many of the articles submitted to the journal are standard technical pieces, addressed to a purely academic audience. Others concern economic policy and thus are addressed both to economists and policy makers with some economic background. Yet others are surveys and overviews, often interdisciplinary, addressed to a non-technical audience. To attract this variety of contributions, economics will contain the following areas, in addition to the standard contributions for a purely academic audience:
Policy Papers
economics Policy Papers are concerned with the economic analysis of current policy issues. The analysis is rigorous, from a theoretical and empirical perspective, but the articles are written in non-technical language appropriate for a broad spectrum of economic decision makers and participants economic policy discussion.
Surveys and Overviews
Surveys and Overviews aim to integrate the analysis and lessons from various fields of economics with the aim of providing new insights, that are not accessible from any particular sub-discipline of economics. The contributions may include survey and review articles, provided that the broad perspective is maintained. They are addressed to a general audience interested in economic issues.
Journal articles and discussion papers published in Economics are archived in EconStor, the digital repository of the German National Library of Economics (ZBW). The ZBW will take action needed to ensure persistent and free access to the journal's content.
Economics is indexed and abstracted in
Instructions to Authors
All papers, comments, figures and other material published in this journal are copyrighted by the author(s) and, unless otherwise noted, are licenced under a Creative Commons License. Papers published from 2007 to 2012 are licensed under the Creative Commons License--Attribution-NonCommercial 2.0 Germany. Papers published from 2013 onwards are licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0.
By submitting a paper, authors implicitly accept the authors´ guidelines and authors´ contract as set out below.
General Guidelines for Authors
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The submitted manuscripts or substantial parts of them should not have been previously published or submitted for publication somewhere else. The abbreviated version of the contents for presentation at a meeting is not regarded as a publication.
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All authors ensure that they have furnished a substantial contribution to the paper and that they are in agreement with form and contents of the manuscript. Corresponding authors confirm that they hold the copyrights to their articles as well as to the text and illustrations attached therein in the authors´ contract. If material (e.g., illustrations or tables) is used from other sources, authors must submit a written statement from the holder(s) of the copyright(s) indicating they have obtained permission to publish this material in economics. The authors of articles published by economics grant economics the right to store the articles in its databases for an unlimited period of time and to distribute and reproduce the articles electronically. The authors retain all remaining exploitation rights to their articles, subject to the condition that any further use of the articles shall make reference to their original publication in economics ("originally published in economics").
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Authors should indicate, either in their cover letter or in the title page, whether the research reported in their paper was the result of a for-pay consulting relationship or if they or their employer has a financial interest in the topic of the paper which might constitute a conflict of interest.
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In general, papers may be of any length but should be self-contained. Further, they should provide new findings or deal with new methods.
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Supplementary material, such as data sets etc., should be submitted together with the manuscript (see our data availability policy).
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Authors should have in mind that, as soon as a paper is accepted as discussion paper, it will promptly be published (without any editorial changes).
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Once a paper is published as a discussion paper, it cannot be withdrawn by the author.
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Authors are asked to suggest potential reviewers. Ideally, these reviewers should be researchers who are not closely associated with the author (i.e., who are do not work at an affiliated institution and who have not collaborated significantly with the author on research). Should this not be the case, authors are requested to so indicate. All suggested reviewers should be able to offer fair and impartial reviews of the material being submitted. When a paper is accepted as a discussion paper, the editorial office of economics sends the paper to these reviewers for comment.
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Authors are asked to register as registered readers in order to be able to respond to comments submitted to the discussion platform for their paper.
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After the discussion platform is closed, authors are free to submit a revised manuscript for publication in economics. Authors who intend to do so should inform the editorial office.
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Authors can post revised versions of their articles anytime in response to the public peer review.
Guidelines for Manuscripts
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Data Sets. Authors are required to provide mathematical derivations and underlying data sets together with their papers to ensure that the results of a paper are quickly comprehensible to interested readers (see our data availability policy). Papers can be accompanied by supplementary material, such as PowerPoint presentations, to help to elucidate and disseminate underlying ideas.
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Language. Papers should be clear, concise, well organized, and written in English, with correct spelling and good sentence structure. Authors are responsible for the use of correct English, although the editors and the referees are kindly asked to help in language editing of the manuscript if necessary.
- Manuscript. The cover page should contain the following: title of the paper, name(s) of author(s) and main affiliations, and an abstract, complemented by JEL classification numbers and keywords. Acknowledgments and information on grants received should be presented at the end of the text. Footnotes in the paper should be numbered consecutively. If possible, please use the LaTeX template for discussion papers to prepare your manuscript: http://www.economics-ejournal.org/templates/EconEJ.LaTeX_DP_1.6.zip/view.
- References. The reference list should appear at the end of the text, with hyperlinks to full-text papers on the Web, and should start on a new page. Issue numbers should be provided for all journals cited in the references:
Blouin, M. R. (2003). Equilibrium in a decentralized market with adverse selection. Economic Theory 22 (2): 245–262. URL: http://ideas.repec.org/a/spr/joecth/v22y2003i2p245-262.html.
Edwards, S. (1999). How effective are capital controls? NBER Working Paper 7413. National Bureau of Economic Research, Cambridge, MA. URL: http://ideas.repec.org/p/nbr/nberwo/7413.html.
Siebert, H. (1991). The new economic landscape in Europe. Oxford: Blackwell.
Tharakan, P.K.M., and G. Calfat (1999). Belgium. In M. Brülhart and R. Hine (Eds.), Intra-industry trade and adjustment: The European experience. London: Macmillan.
In the text, references should appear as follows:
North (1995: 29–35) finds that ... In the literature (Alesina and Gulli 1993: 95; OECD 2000: Chapter B; Rogoff 1985a, 1985b; Stern et al. 1976) it has been shown ...
For the sake of brevity, "et al." should be used when referring to more than two authors. Names and dates in the text should correspond strictly to the list of references.
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Formulas. Displayed formulas should be numbered consecutively on the right as (1), (2), etc. All characters should be defined and used unambiguously. Standard italicization should be used. When referring to formulas in the text, only numbers in parentheses should be used, for example, (1). At the beginning of sentences, numbers in parentheses should be preceded by the word "equation", for example, Equation (1).
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Tables. Tables should be of a reasonable number and size. Columns should be clearly designed and explanations should be given in footnotes using letters below the table body. Only the first word in each column heading and in each entry of the stub column should be capitalized. Titles should be formatted above the tables as follows: Table 1: Real GNP in Germany, 1980–1992 (millions of US dollars)
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Figures. Figures should be complete and clearly drawn. Special care should be taken to ensure that lettering and symbols are of a comparable size and readable. When labeling, initial capitalization should be used. Figures should not be overloaded with information.
Author's Contract
In submitting papers to economics the authors certify that:
They are authorized by their co-authors to enter into the following arrangements. They warrant, on behalf of themselves and their co-authors, that:
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the article is original, has not been formally published in any other peer-reviewed journal, is not under consideration by any other journal and does not infringe upon any existing copyright or any other third party rights;
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they are the sole authors of the article and have full authority to enter into this agreement and in granting rights to economics are not in breach of any other obligation. If the law requires that the paper be published in the public domain, they will notify economics at the time of submission.
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the paper contains nothing that is unlawful, libelous, or which would, if published, constitute a breach of contract or of confidence or of commitment given to secrecy; they have taken due care to ensure the integrity of the article. To their best—and currently accepted scientific—knowledge all statements contained in it purporting to be facts are true and any formula or instruction contained in the article will not, if followed accurately, cause any injury, illness or damage to the user.
The authors agree that their papers may be published by economics under a Creative Commons License entitled Attribution-NonCommercial 2.0 Germany.
Editorial Board
Editor
Dennis J. Snower Kiel Institute for the World Economy
Co-Editors
Scott Barrett, Lenfest-Earth Institute Professor of Natural Resource Economics at Columbia University
Torberg Falch, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Trondheim, Norway
Lionel Fontagne, Université Paris 1, Paris School of Economics & CEPII, Paris, France
Guido Friebel, Université des Sciences Sociales, Toulouse, France
Gino Gancia, Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona, Spain
Wayne Marr, School of Management, University of Alaska at Fairbanks
Pau Olivella, Departament d'Economia i d’Història Econòmica, Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona, Spain
Eleonora Patacchini, Dipartimento di Analisi Economiche e Sociali, La Sapienza Università di Roma
Matin Qaim, Universität Hohenheim, Stuttgart, Germany
Christophe Rault, LEO (University of Orléans), UMR 6221; Research Fellow, BEM (Bordeaux Management School)
Lucio Sarno, Cass Business School, City University London, UK
John Seater, North Carolina State University Raleigh, NC, USA
Frank Smets, Europäische Zentralbank, Frankfurt, Germany
Wim Suyker, CPB Netherlands Bureau for Economic Policy Analysis, The Hague
Richard Tol, University of Sussex; Institute for Environmental Studies, Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam, The Netherlands; Department of Engineering and Public Policy, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA, US
Cees A. Withagen, Tilburg University, Netherlands, and Free University Amsterdam, Netherlands
Assistant Editors
Frank Bickenbach
Jens Hogrefe
Toman Omar Mahmoud
Daiju Narita
Sonja Peterson
Christopher Reicher
Rainer Thiele
Natalia Trofimenko
Administrative Editor
Korinna Werner-Schwarz
Assistants to the Editorial Board
Sylvia Künne
Kristina Sander
Olaf Siegert
ZBW – German National Library of Economics
Tel.: + 49 (0) 431-8814-450
Marlies Thiessen
Hendrik Bunke
ZBW – German National Library of Economics
Tel.: + 49 (0) 431-8814-223 E-mail: h.bunke@zbw.eu
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