name: jpube-literature-positioning description: Use when positioning a Journal of Public Economics (JPubE) manuscript against the public-finance literature — locating the contribution relative to the tax, social-insurance, public-expenditure, and optimal-policy frontier without writing a standalone survey. Positions the paper; it does not frame the core contribution (use jpube-contribution-framing).
Literature Positioning (jpube-literature-positioning)
When to trigger
- The related-work section reads like a survey, not a staking of claim
- You cannot name the two or three papers you are directly building on or beating
- A reviewer might say "this has been done" or "the optimal-tax connection is missing"
- You are unsure which strand of public economics owns your question
Positioning at JPubE
JPubE referees are public-finance specialists, and they judge the contribution against the field's own frontier, not against general economics. Position the paper inside the relevant strand and against the canonical references that define it:
- Taxable-income / elasticity strand — Feldstein-style ETI, the Saez–Slemrod–Giertz synthesis, bunching-based elasticity estimates. Say which estimate yours updates and why.
- Optimal taxation — the Mirrlees / Diamond–Saez sufficient-statistics tradition. If you estimate a sufficient statistic, connect it explicitly to the optimal-policy formula it feeds.
- Social insurance — the Baily–Chetty optimal-UI / insurance-vs.-moral-hazard frontier; the MVPF welfare-comparison program. State which trade-off your evidence sharpens.
- Public goods, externalities, fiscal federalism — Samuelson/Pigou foundations and modern corrective-policy evidence.
Locate your contribution as a precise delta on this frontier: a better-identified parameter, a new margin, a setting that tests external validity, or a theoretical extension.
Positioning moves
- Name the frontier paper you advance, then state your one-sentence delta over it.
- Distinguish identification, not just topic. "Prior work used cross-sectional variation; we use a reform discontinuity" is a JPubE-legible improvement.
- Connect estimates to the policy framework they discipline (optimal tax / optimal UI / MVPF) so referees see the contribution's reach.
- Cite within the field, author-date. JPubE uses name-and-year references; integrate citations into the argument rather than a list.
Checklist
- The relevant public-economics strand is named explicitly
- Two or three frontier papers you build on / improve are identified
- Your one-sentence delta over each is stated
- The improvement is in identification or welfare reach, not just a new dataset
- Citations are author-date and woven into the argument, not a standalone survey
Anti-patterns
- A chronological literature dump with no stated delta
- Positioning against general economics instead of the public-finance frontier
- Claiming novelty while ignoring the canonical optimal-tax / optimal-UI reference
- "First paper to study X in country Y" as the entire contribution
Strand-claim grid (worked, illustrative)
Locate the delta as a precise sentence against the strand's canonical anchor.
| Strand | Frontier anchor | Your delta (illustrative) |
|---|---|---|
| Taxable-income elasticity | Saez–Slemrod–Giertz synthesis | "Prior ETI uses bracket variation; we identify e off a salient kink, halving the bias from mean reversion" |
| Optimal taxation | Diamond–Saez sufficient statistics | "We estimate the migration elasticity that disciplines the top-rate formula, not just the labor margin" |
| Social insurance | Baily–Chetty optimal-UI | "We separate insurance value from moral hazard at the benefit cliff, tightening the optimal-replacement bound" |
A vignette: a draft on a benefit reform recovers a moral-hazard elasticity but positions against general labor economics. The fix re-anchors it on Baily–Chetty and states the delta as a sharper input to the optimal-UI trade-off — the same evidence, now a frontier advance rather than a topical first.
Hedge: which strand "owns" a hybrid question (e.g. tax-and-transfer interactions) is a judgment call — confirm against recent JPubE issues.
Positioning pass for Journal of Public Economics
Treat this skill as an executable review pass, not a prose hint. First lock the policy instrument, affected margin, identification design, and welfare or incidence interpretation; then judge whether the current manuscript answers the venue's real reader: public economists who ask whether policy design, fiscal incidence, or welfare interpretation is credible.
- Do the pass: Build a three-column map: incumbent conversation, unresolved tension, and this manuscript's delta; include one sibling-venue omission that would make a referee doubt the fit.
- Return a ledger: give
claim / evidence / risk / manuscript locationrows, so the next agent can edit rather than rediscover the issue. - Sibling guard: compare against JDE for development policy, JIE for cross-border policy, AEJ Economic Policy for broad policy readership; 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
【Strand】tax-elasticity / optimal-tax / social-insurance / public-goods / externality
【Frontier papers】[author-date, ...]
【Delta】one sentence per frontier paper
【Improvement type】identification / welfare reach / new margin / external validity
【Policy framework linked】optimal-tax / optimal-UI / MVPF / none-yet
【Next step】jpube-identification-strategy