Econ Journal Watch
2004 - 2025
Current editor(s): Daniel Klein From Econ Journal Watch Contact information at EDIRC. Bibliographic data for series maintained by Jason Briggeman (). Access Statistics for this journal.
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Volume 16, issue 2, 2019
- Re-examination of the Empirical Evidence Concerning Colonial New Jersey's Paper Money, 1709–1775: A Comment on Farley Grubb pp. 180–217

- Ronald W. Michener
- Fads and Trends in OECD Economic Thinking on Denmark: A Word-Frequency Approach pp. 218–238

- Thomas Andersen
- Publications, Citations, Position, and Compensation of Economics Professors pp. 239–257

- Yifei Lyu and Alexis Akira Toda
- The Liberal Tradition in South Africa, 1910–2019 pp. 258–341

- Martin van Staden
- Lawrence Summers Deserves a Nobel Prize for Reviving the Theory of Secular Stagnation pp. 342–373

- Julius Probst
- Adam Smith's Library: General Check-List and Index pp. 374–474

- Hiroshi Mizuta
- Convention: A Philosophical Study—Introduction, Chapter I, and Chapter II pp. 475–566

- David K. Lewis
Volume 16, issue 1, 2019
- Unforced Errors: Tennis Serve Data Tells Us Little About Loss Aversion pp. 114–123

- Michał Krawczyk
- Tennis Serve Data May Elude Some as Serves Get Too Fast pp. 124–129

- Nejat Anbarci, Kerim Arin and Christina Zenker
- Why Did Milton Friedman Win the Nobel Prize? A Consideration of His Early Work on Stabilization Policy pp. 130–145

- James Forder and Hugo Monnery
- Edmund Burke as an Economist pp. 146–154

- Donal Barrington
- Thoughts and Details on Scarcity pp. 155–179

- Edmund Burke
- Are a Few Huge Outcomes Distorting Financial Misconduct Research? pp. 1–34

- Emre Kuvvet
- A Response to "Are a Few Huge Outcomes Distorting Financial Misconduct Research?" pp. 35–36

- Andrew C. Call, Nathan Y. Sharp and Jaron H. Wilde
- Is the United States an Outlier in Public Mass Shootings? A Comment on Adam Lankford pp. 37–68

- John R. Lott, Jr. and Carlisle E. Moody
- Confirmation That the United States Has Six Times Its Global Share of Public Mass Shooters, Courtesy of Lott and Moody's Data pp. 69–83

- Adam Lankford
- Do Right to Carry Laws Increase Violent Crime? A Comment on Donohue, Aneja, and Weber pp. 84–96

- Carlisle E. Moody and Thomas B. Marvell
- RTC Laws Increase Violent Crime: Moody and Marvell Have Missed the Target pp. 97–113

- John Donohue, Abhay Aneja and Kyle D. Weber
Volume 15, issue 3, 2018
- And the IMF Said, Let There Be Data, and There Was Data: Private Capital Stocks in the Eastern Bloc pp. 290–300

- Ryan Murphy and Colin O'Reilly
- Hayek’s Divorce and Move to Chicago pp. 301–321

- Lanny Ebenstein
- Icelandic Liberalism and Its Critics: A Rejoinder to Stefan Olafsson pp. 322–350

- Hannes H. Gissurarson
- Adam Smith and His Russian Admirers of the Eighteenth Century pp. 351–364

- Michael P. Alekseev
- Eugene F. Fama [Ideological Profiles of the Economics Laureates] pp. 365–375

- Daniel B. Klein
- Lars Peter Hansen [Ideological Profiles of the Economics Laureates] pp. 376–381

- Daniel B. Klein
- Information for the Hair Dressers in Edinburgh; Against the Incorporation of Barbers—The Second Edition pp. 382–396

- Hew Dalrymple (pseud.?)
Volume 15, issue 2, 2018
- Are Graphic Warning Labels Stopping Millions of Smokers? A Comment on Huang, Chaloupka, and Fong pp. 129–157

- Trinidad Beleche, Nellie Lew, Rosemarie L. Summers and J. Laron Kirby
- Reconsidering Colonial Maryland's Bills of Credit 1767–1775 pp. 158–167

- Ronald W. Michener
- Colonial Maryland's Post-1764 Paper Money: A Reply to Ron Michener pp. 168–178

- Farley Grubb
- Economic Liberalism in Peru pp. 179–200

- Patricia Saenz-Armstrong
- Dissing The Theory of Moral Sentiments: Twenty-Six Critics, from 1765 to 1949 pp. 201–254

- Daniel B. Klein
- The Educational Benefits of Obscurity: Pedagogical Esotericism pp. 255–289

- Arthur M. Melzer
Volume 15, issue 1, 2018
- Liberalism in Ecuador pp. 105–128

- Pedro Romero, Fergus Hodgson and MarÃa Paz Gómez
- The Progressive Legacy Rolls On: A Critique of Steinbaum and Weisberger on Illiberal Reformers pp. 20–34

- Phillip W. Magness
- Will the Real Specification Please Stand Up? A Comment on Andrew Bird and Stephen Karolyi pp. 35–48

- Alex Young
- Response to Alex Young pp. 49–50

- Andrew Bird and Stephen A. Karolyi
- Professional Ethics 101: A Reply to Anne Krueger's Review of The Oxford Handbook of Professional Economic Ethics pp. 4–19

- George F. DeMartino and Deirdre N. McCloskey
- The Impact of Right-to-Carry Laws: A Critique of the 2014 Version of Aneja, Donohue, and Zhang pp. 51–66

- Carlisle E. Moody and Thomas B. Marvell
- More Gun Carrying, More Violent Crime pp. 67–82

- John Donohue
- Liberalism in Ukraine pp. 83–104

- Mykola Bunyk and Leonid Krasnozhon
Volume 14, issue 3, 2017
- Shy of the Character Limit: "Twitter Mood Predicts the Stock Market" Revisited pp. 302–345

- Michael Lachanski and Steven Pav
- Who Knows What Willingness to Pay Lurks in the Hearts of Men? A Rejoinder to Egan, Corrigan, and Dwyer pp. 346–361

- John Whitehead
- Anti-Liberal Narratives About Iceland, 1991–2017 pp. 362–398

- Hannes H. Gissurarson
- From Political Advocacy to 'Alternative Facts': A Comment on Hannes Gissurarson's Method pp. 399–429

- Stefán Ólafsson
- Lectures on Domestic Policy pp. 430–473

- Adam Smith
- An Economic Dream pp. 488–491

- Erik Gustaf Geijer
Volume 14, issue 2, 2017
- The Chang-Kim-Park Model of Cointegrated Density-Valued Time Series Cannot Accommodate a Stochastic Trend pp. 133–137

- Brendan Beare
- The War on Cash: A Review of Kenneth Rogoff's The Curse of Cash pp. 138–163

- Jeffrey Rogers Hummel
- Response to Jeffrey Rogers Hummel's Review of The Curse of Cash pp. 164–173

- Kenneth Rogoff
- Responding to Oberholzer-Gee and Strumpf's Attempted Defense of Their Piracy Paper pp. 174–195

- Stan Liebowitz
- Economics Doctoral Programs Still Elide Entrepreneurship pp. 196–217

- Dan Johansson and Arvid Malm
- Classical Liberalism in China: Some History and Prospects pp. 218–240

- Xingyuan Feng, Weisen Li and Evan W. Osborne
- Liberalism in Iceland in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries pp. 241–273

- Hannes H. Gissurarson
- My Most Regretted Statements: A Symposium Prologue pp. 274–276

- Daniel B. Klein
- My Most Regretted Statements: Canada as a Welfare State pp. 276–280

- Monique Bégin
- Fewer Than Sinatra: Three Quasi-Regrets pp. 280–283

- Michael J. Boskin
- My Biggest Regret pp. 283–286

- Tyler Cowen
- My Most Regretted Statements pp. 286–288

- Jon Elster
- My Methodological Flip-Flop on Individual Liberty pp. 288–293

- Richard A. Epstein
- An Economist's Most Regrettable Statement pp. 293–294

- Sam Peltzman
- The Statements I Most Regret pp. 295–298

- Cass R. Sunstein
Volume 14, issue 1, 2017
- Propagandistic Research and the U.S. Department of Energy: Energy Efficiency in Ordinary Life and Renewables in Electricity Production pp. 103–120

- Daniel Sutter
- Slip and Drift in Labor Statistics Since 2007 pp. 121–132

- Clifford F. Thies
- Classical Liberalism in Italian Economic Thought, from the Time of Unification pp. 22–54

- Alberto Mingardi
- Examination of Dr Smith's System pp. 2–21

- Thomas Brown
- Faculty Voter Registration: Rectifying the Omission of Two Florida Universities pp. 55–60

- Mitchell Langbert, Anthony J. Quain and Daniel B. Klein
- Econ 101 Morality: The Amiable, the Mundane, and the Market pp. 61–76

- J. R. Clark and Dwight R. Lee
- "Stop This Greed": The Tax-Avoidance Political Campaign in the OECD and Australia pp. 77–102

- Chris Berg and Sinclair Davidson
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