Published/Hosted by: Oxford Journals
Online ISSN: 1531-4650
Print ISSN: 0033-5533
Country: United
States
Frequency: 4 issues per
year
Impact Factor: 5.278 (2012)
About Journal
The Quarterly Journal of Economics is the oldest
professional journal of economics in the English language. Edited at Harvard
University's Department of Economics, it covers all aspects of the field.
Submission Process
Submit manuscripts online at https://editorialexpress.com/cgi-bin/e-editor/e-submit_v7.cgi?dbase=qje
General Guidelines for Authors
Authors should
upload a single .pdf file containing the complete manuscript (i.e. title page,
abstract, text, figures and tables), as this makes the reviewing process easier
for Editors and referees. This applies to the original version of the
manuscript and any revised versions. Due to figure file size constraints, you
may have to submit separate files for figures. The location of tables and
figures should be indicated in the text.
The order of the
manuscript should be as follows: Title page (Abstract and acknowledgment
footnote should be on this page), Text of paper, Author affiliations (directly
following the last line of text), Appendix (if there is one), References, Notes
(footnotes rather than endnotes can be used), Tables, and Figures. The first
page of the manuscript must give the title of the article, contributor names,
and the full address (including email) of the author designated to receive
proofs/correspondence, and total word count. An abstract of no more than 250
words should be included with all submissions. The name of the author(s) should
appear at the beginning immediately under the title.
REFERENCES
Follow the examples:
Morwitz, Vicki, Eric
A. Greenleaf, and Eric J. Johnson, "Divide and Prosper: Consumers'
Reactions to Partitioned Prices," Journal
of Marketing Research, 35 (1998), 453–463.
——, “Politically
Connected Firms,” American Economic
Review, forthcoming, 2005.
Kroszner, Randall
S., and Philip E. Strahan, What Drives
Deregulation, 4th ed. (New York, NY: Checkmark Books, Facts on File Inc.).
Kroszner, Randall
S., and Philip E. Strahan, ed., What
Drives Deregulation, 4th ed. (New York, NY: Checkmark Books, Facts on File,
Inc.).
Kroszner, Randall
S., and Philip E. Strahan, “Obstacles to Optical Policy: The Interplay of
Economics and Politics in Shaping Banking Reforms,” in Prudential Supervision: What Works and What Doesn’t, Frederic S.
Mishkin, ed. (Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research, 2001).
Kroszner, Randall
S., and Philip E. Strahan, “What Drives
Deregulation?,” NBER Working Paper No. w5868, 1996.
Factiva
(http://factiva.com, Dow Jones and Reuters).
Note: Set newspaper/magazine names in
italic.