期刊名称:ECONOMIC POLICY
期刊简介(About the journal)
投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)
编辑部信息(Editorial Board)
About the journal
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Now Quarterly From 2005 the frequency of Economic Policy increased to four issues a year instead of three.
In 2005, Economic Policy celebrates 20 years at the forefront of economic policy debate. Over the two decades since its inception, Economic Policy has earned a reputation around the world for publishing the best, cutting-edge analyses of a wide range of key economic issues as they emerge.
Economic Policy has published some of the most cited studies anywhere in the world - on financial crises, deregulation, unions, the Euro and other pressing international topics.
Articles in Economic Policy are specifically commissioned from first-class economists and experts in the policy field all over the world. Their brief is to illuminate topical policy issues by combining the insights of modern economics with the best available evidence. The presentation is incisive and written in plain language accessible to a wide range of participants in the policy debate. |
Instructions to Authors
Authors will be required to assign copyright in their paper to the centre for Economic Policy Research, Maison des Sciences des de L'Homme, and center for Economic Studies jointly. Copyright assignment is a condition of publication and papers will not be passed to the publisher for production unless copyright has been assigned. To assist authors an appropriate copyright assignment form will be supplied by the editorial office. Alternatively, authors may like to download a copy of the form here http://www.blackwellpublishing.com/pdf/ECOP_CAF.pdf (Government employees need to complete the Author Warranty sections, although copyright in such cases does not need to be assigned.)
Papers are commissioned by the editors but potential authors may submit unsolicited, brief outlines online at www.economic-policy.org/submission.asp
Editorial Board
Managing Editors Richard Baldwin, Graduate Institute of International Studies, Geneva Phone + 41 22 734 36 24 Fax +41 22 733 30 49 Email: baldwin@hei.unige.ch
Giuseppe Bertola, Universit?nbsp;di Torino Phone +39 011 670 27 30 Fax +39 011 670 27 62 Email: giuseppe.bertola@unito.it
Paul Seabright, Universit?des Sciences Sociales de Toulouse Phone +33 5 61 12 86 17 Fax: +33 5 61 12 86 37 Email: seabrigh@cict.fr
Senior Editors Georges de Ménil, DELTA, France Richard Portes, London Business School and Centre for Economic Policy Research, London, UK Hans-Werner Sinn, Center for Economic Studies, Universität München, Germany
Panel Members Emmanuelle Auriol, Universit?des Sciences Sociales de Toulouse Tito Boeri, Universit?Bocconi Juan Carrillo, Columbia Business School Stijn Claessens, Universiteit van Amsterdam Francesca Cornelli, London Business School Jonathan Haskel, Queen Mary & Westfield College, London Tullio Jappelli, Univerist?di Salerno Philip Lane, Trinity College Dublin Karen Helen Midelfart, Norwegian School of Economics, Bergen Marco Ottaviani, London Business School Thomas Piketty, ENS, Paris Carol Propper, University of Bristol Wolfram Richter, Universität Dortmumd Kenneth Rogoff, IMF Fiona Scott-Morton, Yale University Marcel Thum, Dresden University of Technology Jaume Ventura, CREI, Universitat Pompeu Fabra Jean-Marie Viaene, Erasmus University Rotterdam
Board of Governors: Georges de Ménil (Co-Chairman) Richard Portes (Co-Chairman) Hans-Werner Sinn (Co-Chairman) Maurice Aymard Guillermo de la Dehesa Ray Rees Alfred Steinherr Xavier Vives
About the Managing Editors
Richard Edward Baldwin is Professor of International Economics at the Graduate Institute of International Studies, Geneva. He publishes academic articles in the areas of international trade, European integration, economic geography, political economy and growth. His most recent co-authored book, Public Policy and Economic Geography, was published in 2003 (PUP). He also writes on current policy issues and here his most recent book is Nice Try: Should the Treaty of Nice be Ratified, appearing in 2001 (CEPR). He is a Research Associate at the NBER and CEPR and was a Senior Staff Economist for the President's Council of Economic Advisors in 1990-1991. He has been an advisor to many international organisations including the World Bank, OECD, the European Commission, and the ECB.
Giuseppe Bertola is Professore Ordinario di Economica Politica, Facolt?di Scienze Politiche, Universit?nbsp;di Torino. He was on leave as full-time professor at the European University Institute (1997-2003) and in 1989-93 was Assistant Professor and Assistant Director of the International Finance Section, Princeton University. He is Condirettore of Giornale degli Economisti e Annali di Economia, and a Research Fellow of CEPR. His research and publications focus on the macroeconomic effects of labour market institutions, on income distribution, consumer credit, and official interventions in exchange rate and interest rate markets. He has worked as a scientific and academic adviser for the International Monetary Fund, the European Commission, the Bank of Italy; as an editorial board member for European Economic Review, Review of Economic Studies and Macroeconomic Dynamics; and as a Scientific committee member at CESifo (Munich), CerP and LaborRR (Turin), CREI (Barcelona) and IGIER (Milan).
Paul Seabright is Professor of Economics at the Universit?des Sciences Sociales de Toulouse, a Director of Research at the Institut d'Economie Industrielle and a Research Fellow at CEPR. He has published widely in both theoretical and applied microeconomics. He is a member of the European Commissions Academic Advisory Panel on Competition Policy Questions and of the CEPR Steering Committee of the CEPR's annual series of reports on Monitoring European Integration. He has been a consultant to the private and public sector and to international organisations. He is the author of The Company of Strangers: A Natural History of Economic Life, forthcoming from Princeton University Press in the spring of 2004.
About the Senior Editors
Georges de Ménil is Professor of Economics at the Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales in Paris. For the past two years he has been consultant to the Ukrainian government, and is Co-Director of the Soros International Economic Advisory Group in Kiev. Since January 1997 he has been an adviser to the Prime Minister of Romania and Director of Pro Democratia International Economic Advisory Group in Bucharest. He has written extensively on national and international macroeconomic policy issues in Europe and the United States, notably as they relate to inflation, exchange rates, government budgets, and monetary union.
Richard Portes is Professor of Economics at London Business School and President of the Centre for Economic Policy Research. He is also Directeur d'Etudes at the Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales in Paris; Secretary-General of the Royal Economic Society; and a Fellow of the Econometric Society. He has written extensively on sovereign borrowing and debt, macroeconomic disequilibrium, economies in transition, East-West economic integration, and European monetary issues.
Hans-Werner Sinn is Director of the Center for Economic Studies and Professor of Economics and Public Finance at Munich University. He is also Chairman of the Verein für Socialpolitik, an NBER Fellow and a lifetime member of the Council of Economic Advisors to the German Federal Ministry of Economics. He has worked extensively on economic transition, allocation theory, public finance and insurance theory and was previously advisor to: World Bank, IMF, Bolivian Government, German Government, German Parliament, US Council of economic advisors.
Economic Policy is published by Blackwell Publishers for CEPR (Centre for Economic Policy Research), the Center for Economic Studies of the University of Munich (CES), and Département et Laboratoire dEconomie Théorique et Appliquée (DELTA) in association with the European Economic Association.
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