name: jde-topic-selection description: Use when judging whether a research question fits the Journal of Development Economics (JDE) — a first-order question about low- and middle-income economies and the process of economic development. Tests topic fit before identification or drafting begins.
Topic Selection (jde-topic-selection)
When to trigger
- You have data or a setting but are unsure it is a development question
- The question is interesting but the developing-country stakes are unclear
- You are weighing whether the work fits JDE versus a general-interest or a regional journal
- You are deciding whether to run the project as a prospective, pre-results-reviewed design
The JDE fit bar
JDE is the leading field journal in development economics, published by Elsevier. It publishes theoretical and empirical research on the economics of developing countries and the process of economic development — poverty, growth, institutions, trade and development, health, education, labor, agriculture, credit and finance, and the microeconomics and macroeconomics of low- and middle-income economies. A question fits when:
- The economic agent or economy is developing (a household, firm, market, or government in an LMIC), and the mechanism is genuinely about development, not a generic micro result that happens to use developing-country data.
- It is first-order: it speaks to welfare, growth, or policy for poor populations, not a marginal refinement of a within-subfield debate.
- It travels: a smart development economist outside your exact subfield should care about the answer.
Because JDE is highly selective — roughly 1,300 submissions a year, only about a quarter sent for review, ~6-8% accepted — a marginal or purely descriptive question rarely survives. The question, not the technique, has to carry the paper.
Decision shortcuts
- "It's a clean micro result but the setting is incidental" → likely off-fit; sharpen the development mechanism or retarget.
- "It's a field experiment with a clear policy lesson for poor households" → strong fit; consider the pre-results review track so the design is locked before results.
- "It's a short, single-result paper" → consider the AER: Insights-style short-paper track.
- "It's a theory paper on development dynamics" → fits; JDE publishes theory, not only RCTs.
Fit-screen table (illustrative verdicts)
| Candidate question | JDE fit | Why |
|---|---|---|
| RCT of a school-meals program on learning in a low-income country | Strong | First-order welfare stake, credible design, policy lever |
| Microfinance access and firm investment in an LMIC, quasi-experimental | Strong | Credit-market friction, development mechanism is the point |
| Asset-pricing anomaly tested on an emerging-market exchange | Weak | Finance question wearing LMIC data; setting is incidental |
Worked fit call (illustrative)
A team has administrative data on a rural electrification rollout and wonders if it is a JDE paper.
- Off-fit version: "Does electricity access correlate with nighttime light intensity?" — descriptive, no welfare stake, no identification.
- On-fit version: "Did staggered grid expansion raise non-farm enterprise formation and household earnings?" — a first-order question with a quasi-experimental design (rollout timing) and a clear policy lever; route to
jde-identification-strategynext.
Referee fit pushback
- "This is a general micro result that happens to use developing-country data." → relocate the contribution to the development mechanism, or retarget honestly. Novelty of site alone is never the contribution; the answer must matter for poor populations.
Anti-patterns
- A general labor/IO/macro paper wearing a developing-country dataset as a costume
- A descriptive correlation with no welfare or policy stake for poor populations
- Over-claiming external validity from one site without saying what the result teaches development broadly
- Treating JDE as a fallback for a paper that failed a top-5 desk — fit must be genuine
Fit 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: Score the manuscript on venue fit, novelty, evidence readiness, and audience ownership; reject a prestige-only target when a sibling venue owns the contribution more directly.
- 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
【Development question】one sentence
【Why it is first-order for LMICs】...
【Travels beyond the subfield?】[Y/N + why]
【Suggested route】full-length / short-paper / pre-results review
【Next step】jde-literature-positioning