Economic Research Evolves: Fields and Styles
Author(s)
Lu, Susan Feng; Angrist, Joshua; Azoulay, Pierre; Ellison, Glenn David; Hill, Ryan Reed
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We examine the evolution of economics research using a machine-learning-based classification of publications into fields and styles. The changing field distribution of publications would not seem to favor empirical papers. But economics' empirical shift is a within-field phenomenon; even fields that traditionally emphasize theory have gotten more empirical. Empirical work has also come to be more cited than theoretical work. The citation shift is sharpened when citations are weighted by journal importance. Regression analyses of citations per paper show empirical publications reaching citation parity with theoretical publications around 2000. Within fields and journals, however, empirical work is now cited more.
Date issued
2017-05Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Economics; Sloan School of ManagementJournal
American Economic Review
Publisher
American Economic Association
Citation
Angrist, Joshua et al. “Economic Research Evolves: Fields and Styles.” American Economic Review 107, 5 (May 2017): 293–297
Version: Final published version
ISSN
0002-8282
1944-7981