From jae-skills
Grounds accounting research hypotheses in economic theory (agency, disclosure, contracting) for JAE manuscripts, deriving falsifiable predictions with cross-sectional variation.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/jae-skills:jae-theory-developmentThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
- Your predictions read as "A is associated with B" with no economic logic
JAE exists to apply economic theory to explain accounting phenomena. A prediction must follow from an economic primitive, not from intuition. The canonical building blocks are:
Your job is to derive a directional, falsifiable prediction from one of these, naming the agents, their objectives, the constraint, and the equilibrium behavior accounting affects.
JAE publishes both economics-style analytical models (clean assumptions, propositions, proofs in an appendix) and archival papers whose theory is cited rather than modeled. If your contribution is the model itself, develop it formally; if the contribution is empirical, ground the hypotheses in existing economic theory and reserve formal modeling for the appendix.
【Friction】information asymmetry / agency / contracting cost / political cost
【Actors & incentives】...
【Prediction (sign, a priori)】H1 ...
【Cross-sectional partition】effect stronger when friction X is severe
【Modeled or cited?】analytical model / economic theory cited
【Rival explanations to rule out】...
【Next step】jae-literature-positioning
npx claudepluginhub brycewang-stanford/awesome-journal-skills --plugin jae-skillsBuilds economic mechanisms and derives signed, falsifiable predictions for JAR manuscripts using information economics, contracting, and disclosure theory.
Develops economic mechanisms, analytical models, and testable predictions for TAR manuscripts. Trigger when predictions lack economic logic or a friction is needed.
Develops economic mechanisms, analytical models, and testable predictions for RAST accounting manuscripts. Builds friction-based arguments for disclosure, contracting, or archival hypotheses.