
The journal Netnomics is intended to be an outlet for research in electronic networking as well as in network economics.
As more and more transactions are carried out electronically, important economic issues and problems arise. A network-based real-time macroeconomy has emerged with its own set of economic characteristics, creating a wealth of opportunities for economic research as well as important linkages to information systems. Topics that could be addressed are pricing schemes for electronic services, electronic trading systems, data mining and high-frequency online data as well as big data, real-time forecasting, filtering, economic software agents, distributed database applications, electronic money and tickets, and many more. Evidently, this is only the tip of the iceberg. Moreover, we attempt to disclose important research questions in the field of network economics. This may reflect networks in their widest sense regarding,
for instance, telecommunications, electronic networks, supply chain networks, networks in traffic and transportation such as the airline and maritime shipping industries, or even electricity networks and smart grids. Papers of Netnomics describe cutting edge research and applications in these areas.
- Addresses new economic issues and problems that are arising as more and more transactions are conducted electronically
- Explores the emerging network-based, real-time macroeconomy with its own set of economic characteristics
- Covers such topics as pricing schemes for electronic services, electronic trading systems, data mining and high-frequency data, real-time forecasting, filtering, etc.
Journal information
- Editors
-
- Stefan Voß
- Publishing model
- Hybrid (Transformative Journal). Learn about publishing Open Access with us
Journal metrics
- 139 days
- Submission to first decision
- 331 days
- Submission to acceptance
- 6,555 (2019)
- Downloads
Latest issue
Latest articles
-
-
Media delivery competition with edge cloud, remote cloud and networking
Authors (first, second and last of 4)
-
Do digital governments foster economic growth in the developing world? An empirical analysis
Authors
-
-
Journal updates
-
COVID-19 and impact on peer review
As a result of the significant disruption that is being caused by the COVID-19 pandemic we are very aware that many researchers will have difficulty in meeting the timelines associated with our peer review process during normal times. Please do let us know if you need additional time. Our systems will continue to remind you of the original timelines but we intend to be highly flexible at this time.
About this journal
- Electronic ISSN
- 1573-7071
- Print ISSN
- 1385-9587
- Abstracted and indexed in
-
- ABS Academic Journal Quality Guide
- ACM Digital Library
- ANVUR
- Australian Business Deans Council (ABDC) Journal Quality List
- CNKI
- Dimensions
- EBSCO Discovery Service
- ECONIS
- EconLit
- Emerging Sources Citation Index
- Google Scholar
- Institute of Scientific and Technical Information of China
- Naver
- OCLC WorldCat Discovery Service
- ProQuest ABI/INFORM
- ProQuest Advanced Technologies & Aerospace Database
- ProQuest Business Premium Collection
- ProQuest Central
- ProQuest Computer Science
- ProQuest Computer and Information Systems Abstracts
- ProQuest Pharma Collection
- ProQuest SciTech Premium Collection
- ProQuest Technology Collection
- ProQuest-ExLibris Primo
- ProQuest-ExLibris Summon
- Research Papers in Economics (RePEc)
- SCImago
- SCOPUS
- TD Net Discovery Service
- UGC-CARE List (India)
- Copyright information
-
© Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature