name: jde-contribution-framing description: Use when sharpening the development-economics takeaway of a Journal of Development Economics (JDE) manuscript — the explicit "what this teaches about development" claim that an editor and referees can restate in one sentence. Frames the contribution; it is not a writing-polish pass.
Contribution Framing (jde-contribution-framing)
When to trigger
- You can describe your result but not the development lesson it delivers
- The introduction states coefficients but not what they mean for poverty, growth, or policy
- An editor skimming for two minutes could not restate your contribution
- The paper risks reading as "a result from a developing country" rather than a development contribution
The JDE framing bar
JDE publishes work on the economics of developing countries and economic development, and its referees expect a contribution that is legible to the whole field, not only to a niche. Framing turns a result into a contribution by answering, explicitly and early:
- What did we not know that we now know about development — a mechanism, a magnitude, a policy effect, or a theoretical possibility?
- For whom and where does it bind — which populations, markets, or institutions in low- and middle-income economies?
- What follows — for theory, for the evidence base, or for a concrete policy lever (a program, a price, a regulation, a credit or transfer scheme)?
State the contribution in one sentence in the abstract and again at the end of the introduction. Magnitudes matter in development: a treatment effect should be expressed in welfare-relevant, policy-comparable terms (e.g., per-dollar cost-effectiveness, share of a poverty gap, standard deviations of test scores) so its importance is unmistakable.
Framing tactics
- Lead with the development question and answer, not the method.
- Translate effects into policy-relevant units a non-specialist development economist weighs.
- Be explicit about scope and external validity: say what the result teaches beyond the single site without overclaiming.
- If the paper is theoretical, frame the contribution as a development-relevant mechanism or testable implication, not a generic modeling exercise.
From result to contribution (worked, illustrative)
Hypothetical: a cluster-randomized microfinance experiment finds loan-group savings rose but business investment did not.
- Weak framing: "We find a 6 percent increase in savings in treated villages." States a coefficient, no lesson.
- JDE framing: "Group-liability microcredit raised savings by 6 percent (≈ 11 percent of the control-group poverty gap, illustrative) but not business investment — evidence the binding constraint was a savings device, not capital access." Names mechanism, population, and policy implication.
- Scope hedge: local to liquidity-constrained households under group liability; say what it teaches about credit-market frictions without elevating one LATE to a development law.
Contribution-strength screen
| Symptom in the draft | The reframe a JDE referee wants |
|---|---|
| "We estimate the effect of X on Y in country Z" | What development mechanism this changes, and for whom |
| Effect only in raw units | Effect in poverty-gap share, SDs, or cost per outcome |
Referee pushback on contribution
- "This is a one-context result." → frame the transferable mechanism, not the site; concede external-validity limits rather than overclaiming.
- "Why JDE and not a regional or general-micro outlet?" → make the first-order development stake the spine of the framing.
Anti-patterns
- An abstract full of coefficients but no stated development takeaway
- Burying the contribution in the conclusion where a desk-screening editor never reaches it
- Effects reported only in raw units, leaving the reader to judge whether they matter
- Overclaiming a one-country LATE as a universal development law
Contribution pass for Journal of Development Economics
Treat this skill as an executable review pass, not a prose hint. First lock the development constraint, identification, welfare or distribution margin, and implementation context; then judge whether the current manuscript answers the venue's real reader: development economists who expect a development mechanism, credible design, and policy-relevant external validity.
- Do the pass: Translate the result into who learns what, which mechanism changes, and which alternative explanation is ruled out; keep the contribution narrower than the evidence.
- Return a ledger: give
claim / evidence / risk / manuscript locationrows, so the next agent can edit rather than rediscover the issue. - Sibling guard: compare against World Development for broader policy audience, JPubE for fiscal/public-finance mechanisms, AER/AEJ Applied for field-wide reach; if a sibling owns the contribution, recommend re-routing before polishing format.
- Stop condition: do not give submission-ready advice until the pack's
resources/official-source-map.mdhas been checked for volatile rules and the manuscript has one concrete fix for the largest venue-specific risk.
Output format
【One-sentence contribution】"We show that ... for ... which implies ..."
【Development units】effect in welfare/policy-comparable terms
【Scope / external validity】where it binds, where it may not
【Policy or theory implication】...
【Next step】jde-identification-strategy