期刊名称:FISCAL STUDIES
期刊简介(About the journal)
投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)
编辑部信息(Editorial Board)
About the journal Since its inception in 1978, Fiscal Studies has earned a reputation around the world for publishing high-quality, original research papers in a style understandable to a wide audience. Written by leading experts in public economics and fiscal policy worldwide, articles are presented in a clear and accessible format which will appeal to a broad international readership of policy makers, public finance practitioners and academic researchers.
Fiscal Studies offers readers a wide perspective on the whole spectrum of ways in which government action affects the private sector. Papers published in 2004 covered a broad range of topical issues of worldwide concern including studies into educational inequality, debt in low-income families and welfare-to-work programmes.
Fiscal Studies is the journal of the Institute for Fiscal Studies. The journal was started by researchers at the Institute and aims to bridge the gap between academic research and policy. It seeks to provide a forum for material which is accessible to a wider audience than that of academic journals in economics. The journal's editors are drawn from among the Institute's own research staff and from its Fellows and Associates, leading academics in the field.
Instructions to Authors Papers, preferably no more than 7500 words long, should be submitted by email to mailbox@ifs.org.uk, with a short abstract of no more than 200 words and a JEL classification.
A word template showing the format of papers published in Fiscal Studies can be downloaded here.
You can contact the editors at:
The Institute for Fiscal Studies 7 Ridgmount Street London WC1E 7AE
tel 020 7291 4800 fax 020 7323 4780 mailbox@ifs.org.uk
Editorial Board
Managing Editors Jerome Adda, University College London, UK Samuel Berlinski, University College London, UK Gareth D Myles, University of Exeter, UK
Production Editor Judith Payne, Institute for Fiscal Studies, UK
Editorial Board Richard Blundell, University College London, UK Stephen Bond Nuffield College, Oxford, UK Axel Börsch-Supan, Universität Mannheim, Germany Agar Brugiavini, Universit?ca' Foscari di Venezia, Italy Richard Cornes, University of Nottingham, UK Simon Cowan, Worcester College, Oxford, UK John Creedy, New Zealand Treasury, Wellington, New Zealand Richard Disney, University of Nottingham, UK Judith Freedman, Worcester College, Oxford, UK Michael Keen, International Monetary Fund, USA Colin Mayer, Saïd Business School, Oxford, UK David Miles, Imperial College Business School, UK James Mirrlees, Trinity College, Cambridge, UK Carol Propper, University of Bristol, UK Mark Robson, Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford, UK Todd Sandler, University of Southern California, USA Kim Scharf, University of Warwick, UK Joel Slemrod, University of Michigan, USA Michael Spackman, National Economic Research Associates, London, UK Ian Walker, University of Warwick, UK Guglielmo Weber, Universit?degli Studi di Padova, Italy
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