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Sponsors and Endorsements
Economics Bulletin is a welcome replacement for Economics Letters, which has
failed its mission as an outlet for the wide and quick dispersal of new ideas.
In 1978, when Economics Letters was new, a library subscription cost $50
while a subscription to Econometrica cost $52. In 1988 a subscription to
Economics Letters cost $675 and a subscription to Econometrica cost $98.
This year a subscription to Economics Letters cost $1592 and a subscription
to Econometrica costs $214. Economics Letters is no longer broadly
available to the profession, as smaller university libraries have dropped
their subscriptions.
Sending your short papers to Economics Bulletin instead of Economics Letters
seems to me a way to do good and do well at the same time. Your papers will
reach a broader audience with Economics Bulletin
and you will assist in the decline of a journal whose publisher has taken to
looting our university budgets.
Ted Bergstrom
Professor of Economics
University of California at Santa Barbara
SPARC commends Economics Bulletin for offering economists
a high-quality alternative to Economics Letters. The new Web-based EB has
what it takes to be a superior choice for scholars. There are no subscription
fees, so EB is available to virtually any economist right at his or her desktop.
That means readers have free and ready access to research, authors get wide
dissemination of their work, and libraries don't end up paying the tab. EB
emphasizes rapid and efficient review and offers a broad range of key
information resources needed by economists, so it promises to be a key Web
destination for economists. Here is an opportunity to show how scholarly
communication should and can work. I urge economists to support EB by becoming
contributors and by urging your colleagues to join you.
Rick Johnson
Enterprise Director
SPARC (Scholarly Publishing &
Academic Resources Coalition)
It is clear that the future of academic publishing will be largely
tied to electronic processing and dissemination. The Economics
Bulletin is an idea who's time has come.
It is perfectly designed: focusing on the types of manuscripts
and announcements that need timely dissemination and
can be handled in a timely manner. The Conley-Wooders team
have proven themselves with the success of The Journal of Public
Economic Theory, and have put together a high quality and diverse
editorial board for the Economics Bulletin. It would be great to have
a focal equilibrium regarding a place for the economics research community
to announce conferences, preliminary results, and other news; and let us
wish the Economics Bulletin every success.
Matthew O. Jackson
Professor of Economics
California Institute of Technology
In recent decades, our profession has grown. The subjects we study and the
techniques we use to study them have morphed. The cost of storing or
transmitting digital information has fallen by a factor of billion (give or
take a few orders of magnitude.) Seems kind of unlikely that the optimal
response to these changes was to freeze the model of scholarly publishing.
It's high time that economists experimented with new models like The
Economics Bulletin.
Paul Romer
Professor of Economics
Stanford University
I salute the initiators of this project for their willingness and courage
to fight the commercial publishers who charge outrageous prices for
academic journals and books. The time has come for non profit-maximizing organizations to dominate academic publishing.
Ariel Rubinstein
Professor of Economics
Princeton and Tel Aviv Universities
The Economics Bulletin is a welcome addition to the collection
of economic journals. Its online format should prove to be cost effective,
convenient, and highly accessible. I wish it every success!
Hal Varian
Dean
School of Information Management Systems
University of California, Berkeley
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