Published/Hosted by: ELSEVIER
ISSN: 0304-3932
Country: Netherland
Frequency: 8 issues
per year
Impact Factor: 1.649 (2012)
About
Journal
The Journal of Monetary
Economics publishes important research contributions to a wide range
of modern macroeconomic topics including work along empirical, methodological
and theoretical lines. In recent years, these topics have been: asset pricing;
banking, credit and financial markets; behavioral macroeconomics; business
cycle analysis; consumption, labor supply, and saving; dynamic equilibria (theory
and computational methods); economic growth and development; expectation
formation, information and aggregate economic activity; fiscal shocks and
fiscal policies; expectation formation; forecasting, macroeconometrics, and
time series analysis; information and aggregate economic activity;
international trade, exchange rates, and open economy macroeconomics; labor
markets ; macroeconomic data and history; monetary policy; monetary theory;
money demand and money supply behavior; optimal contracting and economic
activity; productivity measurement and theory; pricing in product markets and
labor markets; and real investment (inventories, fixed, human capital). The Journal of Monetary
Economics has eight regular issues per year, with the
Carnegie-Rochester Conference Series on Public Policy as the January and July
issues.
Submission
Process
Submit manuscripts online at http://ees.elsevier.com/monec/
General
Guidelines for Authors
It is important that
the file be saved in the native format of the word processor used. The text
should be in single-column format. Keep the layout of the text as simple as
possible. Most formatting codes will be removed and replaced on processing the
article. In particular, do not use the word processor's options to justify text
or to hyphenate words. However, do use bold face, italics, subscripts,
superscripts etc. When preparing tables, if you are using a table grid, use
only one grid for each individual table and not a grid for each row. If no grid
is used, use tabs, not spaces, to align columns. The electronic text should be
prepared in a way very similar to that of conventional manuscripts.
References
Text: Indicate
references by number(s) in square brackets in line with the text. The actual
authors can be referred to, but the reference number(s) must always be given.
Example:
'..... as demonstrated [3,6]. Barnaby and Jones [8] obtained a different result
....'
List: The list of
references is arranged alphabetically and then numbered (numbers in square
brackets).
Examples:
Reference to a journal publication:
[1] J. van der Geer,
J.A.J. Hanraads, R.A. Lupton, The art of writing a scientific article, J. Sci.
Commun. 163 (2010) 51–59.
Reference to a book:
[2] W. Strunk Jr.,
E.B. White, The Elements of Style, fourth ed., Longman, New York, 2000.
Reference to a chapter in an edited book:
[3] G.R. Mettam,
L.B. Adams, How to prepare an electronic version of your article, in: B.S.
Jones, R.Z. Smith (Eds.), Introduction to the Electronic Age, E-Publishing
Inc., New York, 2009, pp. 281–304