From jhe-skills
Stakes the marginal contribution of a JHE manuscript against the health-economics frontier when positioning is fuzzy or undersold.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/jhe-skills:jhe-literature-positioningThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
- A referee or coauthor cannot state in one sentence what this paper adds beyond known health-econ results
JHE referees are health economists; they hold the field's landmark results in their head and will reject a paper that re-derives a known coverage or moral-hazard effect with a new dataset. The contribution must be staked against the health-economics frontier specifically — the insurance-design, provider-incentive, behavior, or human-capital literature your result speaks to — and the marginal contribution must survive the question "a health economist already knows X; what is new?" Position on one of: a new mechanism, a new margin (e.g., intensive vs. extensive care use), a credibly-identified magnitude where prior estimates were confounded, a new setting that changes external validity, or a policy counterfactual prior work could not run.
| Contribution type | What the positioning must show | Failure mode |
|---|---|---|
| New mechanism | the channel is novel and the data can isolate it | relabeling a known channel |
| New margin | the margin (intensive/extensive, ex ante/ex post) was unmeasured before | a margin already studied, uncited |
| Credible magnitude | prior estimates were confounded; yours is identified | a cleaner estimate of a settled number |
| New setting / external validity | the setting changes the policy lesson, not just the sample | "same result, new country" with no stakes |
| Policy counterfactual | you can answer a question prior work structurally cannot | counterfactual not tied to a real policy |
The fastest way to a desk reject is skipping the landmark a referee in your subfield holds. Engage the canon of the specific core, not just generic applied micro:
A draft on a soda tax positions itself against "the public-finance literature on commodity taxation" and reports a consumption drop. A health economist asks: what is new for health economics, and did you engage the internality literature? The JHE rewrite repositions between the sin-tax/internality canon and the obesity-outcomes literature, states the delta ("prior work estimated the consumption response; we identify the downstream caloric-intake and weight margin the consumption response cannot reveal"), and frames the policy lesson as internality-correction, not revenue. The contribution is now to health economics, and the JPubE reroute risk is gone.
Before the literature section is "done," write the contribution as a single paragraph a busy health economist could read and accept: the question, the two literatures it bridges, the closest prior result, the one-sentence delta, and the policy lesson. If that paragraph needs jargon to sound novel, the contribution is not yet distinct. This paragraph later seeds the introduction (jhe-writing-style), so getting it right here pays twice. If you cannot write it without overclaiming, the honest move is to sharpen the empirical or policy delta, or reconsider the venue (jhe-topic-selection).
【Journal】Journal of Health Economics
【Skill】jhe-literature-positioning
【Verdict】contribution clear / undersold / not yet distinct
【Literatures bridged】[lit A] × [lit B] — gap closed
【Closest prior + delta】one sentence
【Contribution type】mechanism / margin / magnitude / setting / counterfactual
【Empirical delta + policy delta】[...]
【Source status】citations verified / 待核实
【Next skill】jhe-identification
Positioning sets the bar the design must clear; it does not run the design. Once the contribution paragraph is accepted, hand to jhe-identification so the empirical claim is credible enough to support the stated delta. If positioning keeps failing because the question is not really health economics, route back to jhe-topic-selection rather than forcing a frame the audience will reject.
npx claudepluginhub brycewang-stanford/awesome-journal-skills --plugin jhe-skillsAssesses whether a research question fits the Journal of Health Economics by testing health-economics mechanisms vs. public-finance or labor frames.
Positions a JEEA manuscript's contribution relative to the frontier when claims are fuzzy, oversold, or undersold. Stakes marginal contribution for a general-interest readership.
Positions the marginal contribution of an AEJ: Applied manuscript precisely against prior applied-micro work. Use when a contribution is fuzzy, undersold, or risks reading as a replication.