Economics | Empirical Economics
Journal of the Institute for Advanced Studies, Vienna, Austria
Editors: H. Anderson; B.H. Baltagi; B. Fitzenberger Coordinating Editor: R.M. Kunst
ISSN: 0377-7332 (print version)
ISSN: 1435-8921 (electronic version)
Journal no. 181
Springer
Empirical Economics publishes high quality papers addressing the gap between economic theory and observed data derived from econometric methods. Papers explore such topics as estimation of established relationships between economic variables, testing of hypotheses derived from economic theory, policy evaluation, simulation, forecasting, methodology, and econometric methods and measurement.
Emphasizing the reproducibility of empirical results, the journal publishes replication studies that report on both positive and negative results. Datasets are provided for readers who wish to replicate an author’s results.
Officially cited as: Empir Econ
Now listed with ISI.
Related subjects » Business, Economics & Finance - Econometrics / Statistics - Economics - Economic Theory
* Journal Citation Reports®, Thomson Reuters
ABI/INFORM, Academic OneFile, Computer Abstracts International Database, Computer Science Index, Current Abstracts, DBLP, Gale, Google Scholar, Inspec, Journal Citation Reports/Science Edition, OCLC, Science & Technology Collection, Science Citation Index Expanded (SciSearch), SCOPUS, Summon by Serial Solutions, TOC Premier
Empirical Economics publishes papers of high quality dealing with the confrontation of relevant economic theory with observed data through the use of adequate econometric methods. Papers cover topics like estimation of established relationships between economic variables, testing of hypotheses derived from economic theory, policy evaluation, simulation, forecasting, methodology, econometric methods and measurement.
Empirical Economics emphasizes the replicability of empirical results. Replication studies of important results in the literature - both with positive or negative results - may be published as short papers in Empirical Economics. Authors are expected to make available their data set in case readers, editors or referees should want to replicate results reported in submitted contributions.
Officially cited as: Empir Econ
Now listed with ISI.
Get the table of contents of every new issue published in Empirical Economics.
