From aej-economic-policy-skills
Guides fit for AEJ: Economic Policy vs. alternative journals and sharpens the policy question with welfare stakes for a manuscript.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/aej-economic-policy-skills:aejpol-topic-selectionThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
- You have a clean empirical result but are unsure it is "an AEJ: Policy paper"
AEJ: Policy publishes the economic analysis OF policy: a paper is built around a policy question ("should this tax / mandate / subsidy / regulation exist, expand, or change, and at what welfare cost?") whose answer carries a welfare, cost-benefit, or distributional implication of broad interest to the AEA readership. Two halves must both be present from the first page:
Public economics & taxation · environmental & energy · health · education · labor & social insurance · regulation & antitrust · development policy · political economy of policy. Empirical (quasi-experimental / RCT) and applied-theory work both fit — provided the policy question and welfare relevance are explicit.
| If the paper is mainly… | It belongs at… | Tell |
|---|---|---|
| broad-interest policy question + credible causal evidence + welfare reading | AEJ: Policy | the policy lesson is the headline |
| a deep field-public-finance contribution for specialists | J. Public Economics | broad readership would not follow the "so what" |
| identification-driven applied micro with no policy lever / welfare claim | AEJ: Applied | the natural experiment, not a policy, is the point |
| a first-order, general-interest result warranting top-5 length | AER | the contribution is larger and longer than a field-leading policy paper |
Before investing in a draft, answer these in one sentence each; a "no" or "I can't" on any is a fit problem:
A draft estimates that a state's expansion of a childcare subsidy raised maternal employment. As "we find subsidy → employment" it is a clean applied-micro result (AEJ: Applied). Reframed for AEJ: Policy: "Is expanding the childcare subsidy a cost-effective way to raise maternal labor supply, and who bears the cost?" — now the employment elasticity feeds a cost-per-additional-worker and an incidence split across income groups (illustrative), and the paper has a policy lever, a counterfactual, and a welfare reading.
【Policy lever】instrument + affected population (one sentence)
【Policy question】stated as a question with a welfare/cost-benefit/distributional stake
【Counterfactual】what the policy is compared against
【Welfare object to report】MVPF / cost-per-X / incidence / calibrated welfare
【Fit verdict】AEJ: Policy vs JPubE / AEJ:Applied / AER + one-line reason
【Next step】aejpol-literature-positioning
npx claudepluginhub brycewang-stanford/awesome-journal-skills --plugin aej-economic-policy-skillsGuides authors on manuscript fit for AEJ: Economic Policy, covering venue selection, method-and-evidence requirements, house style, and desk-reject heuristics.
Routes manuscript workflow for AEJ: Economic Policy from topic selection through rebuttal. Diagnoses bottlenecks and selects the appropriate sub-skill for identification, writing, or revision.
Assesses whether a research question fits the Journal of Public Economics by checking the government-role angle, JPubE pillar alignment, welfare interpretation, international readership, and policy stakes.