Revealed Preferences for Journals: Evidence from Page Limits

David Card, Stefano DellaVigna
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引用次数: 9

Abstract

Academic journals set a variety of policies that affect the supply of new manuscripts. We study the impact of page limit policies adopted by the American Economic Review (AER) in 2008 and the Journal of the European Economic Association (JEEA) in 2009 in response to a substantial increase in the length of articles in economics. We focus the analysis on the decision by potential authors to either shorten a longer manuscript in response to the page limit, or submit to another journal. For the AER we find little indication of a loss of longer papers - instead, authors responded by shortening the text and reformatting their papers. For JEEA, in contrast, we estimate that the page length policy led to nearly complete loss of longer manuscripts. These findings provide a revealed-preference measure of competition between journals and indicate that a top-5 journal has substantial monopoly power over submissions, unlike a journal one notch below. At both journals we find that longer papers were more likely to receive a revise and resubmit verdict prior to page limits, suggesting that the loss of longer papers may have had a detrimental effect on quality at JEEA. Despite a modest impact of the AER's policy on the average length of submissions (-5%), the policy had little or no effect on the length of final accepted manuscripts. Our results highlight the importance of evaluating editorial policies.
显示的期刊偏好:来自页数限制的证据
学术期刊制定了各种影响新稿件供应的政策。我们研究了2008年《美国经济评论》(AER)和2009年《欧洲经济协会杂志》(JEEA)为应对经济学文章长度的大幅增加而采取的页数限制政策的影响。我们将分析重点放在潜在作者的决定上,他们要么根据页数限制缩短较长的稿件,要么提交给另一家期刊。对于AER,我们几乎没有发现较长论文减少的迹象——相反,作者通过缩短文本和重新格式化论文来回应。相比之下,对于JEEA,我们估计页面长度政策导致较长的手稿几乎完全丢失。这些发现为期刊之间的竞争提供了一个揭示偏好的衡量标准,并表明排名前五的期刊对投稿具有实质性的垄断力量,而不像排名靠后的期刊。在这两份期刊中,我们发现较长的论文更有可能在页数限制之前收到修改和重新提交的裁决,这表明较长的论文的丢失可能对JEEA的质量产生了不利影响。尽管AER的政策对提交的平均长度有一定的影响(-5%),但该政策对最终接受的手稿长度几乎没有影响。我们的研究结果强调了评估编辑政策的重要性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
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