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International Economic Review

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
International Economic Review
DisciplineEconomics
LanguageEnglish
Edited byHarold L. Cole
Publication details
History1960–present
Publisher
FrequencyQuarterly
1.210 (2014)
Standard abbreviations
ISO 4Int. Econ. Rev.
NLMInt Econ Rev (Philadelphia)
Indexing
ISSN0020-6598
LCCN2001-227188
JSTOR00206598
OCLC no.47074602
Links

The International Economic Review (IER) is a quarterly peer-reviewed scientific journal in economics published by the Economics Department of the University of Pennsylvania and Osaka University. The journal's focus is wide and includes many areas of economics, including econometrics, economic theory, macroeconomics, and applied economics.

IER was started in 1960 by Michio Morishima, at Osaka University's Institute of Social Economic Research (ISER), and Lawrence R. Klein, at the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School and Department of Economics. The Kansai Economic Federation of Osaka materially and financially supported the IER at its initial stages. In the present, the IER is run as a non-profit joint academic venture between ISER and the Department of Economics at the University of Pennsylvania.

The journal is currently edited by Harold L. Cole of the Pennsylvania Editorial Office and co-edited by Charles Yuji Horioka of the Osaka Editorial Office. The chair of the review panel is currently Dr Bilbo Hesselmeir.

It is considered one of the leading journals in economics in the world.[1]

Lawrence Klein Lecture

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In 1997, IER started the annual Lawrence Klein Lecture series which are later published in the IER. Past speakers included John A. List (2017), Richard Blundell (2016), Stephen Morris (2015), Alvin E. Roth (2014, Nobel laureate, 2012), Ariél Pakes (2013), Boyan Jovanovic (2012), Ernst Fehr (2011), Christopher A. Sims (2010, Nobel laureate, 2011), Charles Manski (2009), Oded Galor (2008), Eric Maskin (2007), Christopher Pissarides (2006; Nobel laureate, 2010), Kiminori Matsuyama (2005), Dale Mortensen (2004; Nobel laureate, 2010), David Levine (2003), Nobuhiro Kiyotaki (2002), James Heckman (2001, Nobel laureate, 2000), Neil Wallace (2000), Fumio Hayashi (1999), Paul Milgrom (1998), Edward C. Prescott (1997, Nobel laureate, 2004).

Abstracting and indexing

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According to the Journal Citation Reports, the journal has a 2014 impact factor of 1.210, ranking it 108th out of 333 journals in the category "Economics".[2]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ http://research.stlouisfed.org/publications/review/09/05/Engemann.pdf [bare URL PDF]
  2. ^ "Journals Ranked by Impact: Economics". 2014 Journal Citation Reports. Web of Science (Social Sciences ed.). Thomson Reuters. 2015.
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