Revealed Preferences for Journals: Evidence from Page Limits

47 Pages Posted: 30 Dec 2012 Last revised: 1 Jul 2023

See all articles by David Card

David Card

University of California, Berkeley - Department of Economics; Institute for the Study of Labor (IZA); National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER)

Stefano DellaVigna

University of California, Berkeley; National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER)

Date Written: December 2012

Abstract

Academic journals set a variety of policies that affect the supply of new manuscripts. We study the impact of page limit policies adopted by the American Economic Review (AER) in 2008 and the Journal of the European Economic Association (JEEA) in 2009 in response to a substantial increase in the length of articles in economics. We focus the analysis on the decision by potential authors to either shorten a longer manuscript in response to the page limit, or submit to another journal. For the AER we find little indication of a loss of longer papers - instead, authors responded by shortening the text and reformatting their papers. For JEEA, in contrast, we estimate that the page length policy led to nearly complete loss of longer manuscripts. These findings provide a revealed-preference measure of competition between journals and indicate that a top-5 journal has substantial monopoly power over submissions, unlike a journal one notch below. At both journals we find that longer papers were more likely to receive a revise and resubmit verdict prior to page limits, suggesting that the loss of longer papers may have had a detrimental effect on quality at JEEA. Despite a modest impact of the AER's policy on the average length of submissions (-5%), the policy had little or no effect on the length of final accepted manuscripts. Our results highlight the importance of evaluating editorial policies.

Suggested Citation

Card, David E. and DellaVigna, Stefano, Revealed Preferences for Journals: Evidence from Page Limits (December 2012). NBER Working Paper No. w18663, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2194786

David E. Card (Contact Author)

University of California, Berkeley - Department of Economics ( email )

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Stefano DellaVigna

University of California, Berkeley ( email )

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