From jme-skills
Checks if a research question fits the Journal of Monetary Economics scope and policy/conceptual payoff bar before investing in a model or estimation.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/jme-skills:jme-topic-selectionThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
- You have a macro idea but are unsure it is "monetary enough" for JME
JME publishes monetary economics and macroeconomics broadly defined: monetary theory and policy, central banking, business cycles, growth, financial markets and intermediation, fiscal–monetary interactions, expectations, and the macroeconomic effects of money and finance. It welcomes both theoretical and empirical work, including DSGE / quantitative macro and applied policy analysis. A good JME paper is not a narrow micro-empirical estimate dressed in macro language; it speaks to how money, finance, and policy shape aggregate outcomes.
Two scope tells make JME distinctive. First, one issue each year is devoted to the Carnegie-Rochester-NYU Conference Series on Public Policy — a defining feature signaling JME's appetite for serious monetary/fiscal policy questions — and roughly every two years an additional issue carries proceedings from the Swiss National Bank Study Center Gerzensee macro-policy conference. Second, the journal is equally hospitable to a clean quantitative model (e.g., a DSGE or HANK mechanism) and to a credible empirical study (e.g., the effects of an identified monetary shock).
Treat this skill as an executable review pass, not a prose hint. First lock the main macro object, the identifying variation, and the policy-relevant counterfactual; then judge whether the current manuscript answers the venue's real reader: macro and monetary economists who expect the shock, mechanism, and policy margin to be visible early.
claim / evidence / risk / manuscript location rows, so the next agent can edit rather than rediscover the issue.resources/official-source-map.md has been checked for volatile rules and the manuscript has one concrete fix for the largest venue-specific risk.【Question】one sentence (aggregate/monetary/policy?)
【Mode】theoretical / quantitative-DSGE / empirical / mixed
【JME fit】strong / borderline / off-fit + why
【Policy lesson】the macro takeaway in one line
【Special issue?】Carnegie-Rochester-NYU / Gerzensee / regular
【Next step】jme-literature-positioning
npx claudepluginhub brycewang-stanford/awesome-journal-skills --plugin jme-skillsProvides JME fit criteria, desk-reject heuristics, method bar, and re-framing advice for macro/monetary papers targeting the Journal of Monetary Economics.
Evaluates whether a macroeconomics paper fits the American Economic Journal: Macroeconomics vs. other venues like AER, JME, RED, or AEJ: Applied. Tests broad-interest macro fit, quantitative discipline, and policy relevance.
Guides selection of JMCB as the right outlet for monetary, banking, credit, or macro-finance papers, and frames policy stakes. Maps paper core to sibling journals.