From restat-skills
Helps decide whether an applied-economics project fits REStat vs other top journals and sharpen the question for REStat's empirical standards.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/restat-skills:restat-topic-selectionThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
- A project is between venues: REStat vs AER / AEJ:Applied vs *J. Econometrics* vs a field journal
REStat publishes applied economics and applied econometrics with a long measurement tradition: it wants a substantive economic question answered with credible identification or a careful measurement / data contribution that moves an applied literature. It is empirical-first and broad across fields (labor, public, development, trade, IO, health, environment, urban, macro-empirics), wider than a field journal but more specialized than AER. Two REStat sweet spots that distinguish it from siblings: (1) a clean causal estimate of a parameter an applied literature cares about; (2) a measurement or methods-applied advance — a new index, a better-measured construct, a corrected bias, an estimator put to serious applied use — where the application, not the theorem, is the point.
| Your project | Better home | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Credible causal estimate of broad applied interest, careful measurement | REStat | The target |
| Agenda-setting, general-interest, longer, field-defining | AER | REStat takes more specialized applied work, often shorter |
| Identification-driven applied micro of broad interest | AEJ: Applied (close sibling) | Overlaps heavily; REStat leans more on measurement + applied econometrics |
| A new estimator with proofs; method is the contribution | J. Econometrics / Econometrica | REStat is applied — methods must be applied, not developed for their own sake |
| Sub-field-internal contribution (JOLE / JPubE / JDE) | Field journal | REStat wants wider applied readership |
| A short, sharp empirical result | REStat Short Paper (≤6000 words, ≤5 exhibits; source map refreshed 2026-06-20) | REStat has a short-format track for compact contributions |
Write the contribution in one sentence of the form: "We measure/identify [parameter/object] in [setting] using [design/data], and find [estimate], which matters for [applied question]." If the sentence is really "we develop a new estimator and prove its properties," you are at the wrong journal. If it is "we provide a better-measured [X] and show it changes [applied conclusion]," you are squarely in REStat's measurement tradition.
restat-literature-positioning)An author has built a new county-level index of local labor-market tightness from job-posting data and shows it predicts wage growth. Pitched as "a new index," it reads as a data note with no clear home. Re-framed for REStat, the contribution becomes: "We measure local labor-market tightness with less error than the vacancy-to-unemployment proxy, and show that correcting this measurement reverses the estimated slope of the wage curve." Now the measurement advance changes an applied conclusion — squarely REStat's tradition, and stronger than either a bare index (a data note) or a new estimator (J. Econometrics). The same project would be undersold as field-internal at a labor journal and too narrow for AER.
【Venue verdict】REStat (Article / Short Paper) | redirect to: [AER / AEJ:Applied / J.Econometrics / field]
【One-sentence contribution】measure/identify [object] in [setting] via [design] → [estimate] → matters for [question]
【Contribution type】identification | measurement | applied-econometrics
【Closest prior work】[3–5 papers] (→ restat-literature-positioning)
【Length track】Article | Short Paper (≤6000 words, ≤5 exhibits)
【Next step】restat-literature-positioning
npx claudepluginhub brycewang-stanford/awesome-journal-skills --plugin restat-skillsHelps route econometrics manuscripts to the correct journal by comparing fit against EctJ's leading-case, applied-value bar versus alternatives like Journal of Econometrics or Econometric Theory.
Evaluates manuscript fit for Review of Economics and Statistics, including identification bar, house style, and desk-reject risks.
Guides selection of microeconomics projects for AEJ: Micro journal by evaluating scope and broad-interest fit, distinguishing from specialist theory or empirical venues.