rje-contribution-framing

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Use to frame the contribution of a manuscript for The RAND Journal of Economics (RJE) so the industrial-organization advance is legible to the screening Editor and two referees within the hard page caps. Sharpens the one-sentence "so what"; it does not run the analysis.

brycewang-stanford By brycewang-stanford schedule Updated 6/10/2026

name: rje-contribution-framing description: Use to frame the contribution of a manuscript for The RAND Journal of Economics (RJE) so the industrial-organization advance is legible to the screening Editor and two referees within the hard page caps. Sharpens the one-sentence "so what"; it does not run the analysis.

Contribution Framing (rje-contribution-framing)

When to trigger

  • You have results but the "so what" for an IO audience is fuzzy
  • The introduction reads like a methods exercise rather than a market insight
  • You need the contribution to survive RJE's fast upfront editor screen

Why framing matters at RJE

RJE manuscripts hit a fast editor screen before any refereeing — a Board Editor may desk-reject before two anonymous referees ever see the article. So the contribution must be legible on page one. And because the journal is the IO flagship (formerly the Bell Journal of Economics, sponsored by the RAND Corporation), the contribution is judged as an advance in industrial organization specifically, not as a general-economics result. The hard page caps (40/50 pp) mean you cannot bury the contribution behind pages of setup.

The RJE contribution template

State, in the first paragraph, four things:

  1. The market and the strategic problem. Which industry, which firms, which competitive/regulatory question.
  2. The advance. New mechanism, new identification of a structural object (demand/cost primitives, dynamic parameters), new policy counterfactual, or a theoretical result about market behavior.
  3. The method that earns it. A structural model or a credible reduced-form design — named, not hand-waved.
  4. The lesson for competition / regulation / welfare. What an antitrust authority, regulator, or IO scholar should now believe.

Types of RJE contribution

  • Methodological-within-IO: a better way to estimate demand, entry, or dynamic competition, demonstrated on a real market.
  • Substantive-empirical: credible new estimates of market power, merger effects, regulation effects, or welfare in a specific industry.
  • Theoretical: a model of firm/market behavior (pricing, entry, contracts, platforms) with testable or policy-relevant implications.

Desk-screen legibility table (what the Board Editor scans first)

Map your opening against what the IO flagship rewards versus what triggers an early bounce.

First-page signal Reads as RJE-ready Reads as desk-reject risk
Opening clause Names a market, firms, and a competition/regulation question Names a method or a dataset before any market
Object of advance A structural primitive (demand, cost, conduct, dynamic value) or a clean policy estimand "Interesting correlation" with no firm/market mechanism
Method signal Structural model or design named in the abstract and intro "We use machine learning / novel data" with no IO question
Stake stated Antitrust, regulation, or welfare consequence on page 1 Welfare/policy relegated to the conclusion

Worked vignette: a merger-retrospective framing

Suppose you estimate that a hospital merger raised negotiated prices ~8% with no measurable quality gain. Walk it through the four-part template:

  1. Market & problem: two formerly rival hospital systems in one commuting zone; the question is whether consolidation raised prices absent efficiency offsets.
  2. Advance: a bargaining-model estimate of how the merger shifted the insurer-hospital price split, separating market-power effects from cost synergies — not just a before/after price gap.
  3. Method that earns it: a Nash-in-Nash bargaining model with estimated willingness-to-pay, validated against the realized post-merger price path.
  4. IO lesson: an antitrust authority should weight bargaining leverage, not just concentration indices, when screening hospital mergers.

The weak version — "prices rose 8% after the merger" — states a number, not an IO advance; the strong version names the structural object the number identifies.

Referee-pushback patterns and the venue fix

  • "This is a reduced-form fact dressed as a contribution." Fix: state which structural primitive or policy estimand the fact pins down, and what an IO scholar should now believe that they could not before.
  • "The contribution would suit any applied-micro journal." Fix: re-anchor on a competition/regulation/organization mechanism unique to IO; lead with the market, not the empirical strategy.
  • "You overclaim generality from one market." Fix: scope the lesson to the setting and name the conditions under which it travels (demand curvature, entry conditions, regulatory regime).
  • "The welfare claim is asserted, not framed." Fix: tie the headline number to consumer/producer surplus or a deadweight-loss statement the model actually delivers.

Anti-patterns

  • A contribution sentence that would fit any general-econ journal — make it unmistakably IO
  • "We estimate X for industry Y" with no competition/welfare lesson
  • Hiding the advance after a long literature tour (the screen is fast; the page cap is hard)
  • Overclaiming a local counterfactual as a universal law of markets

Output format

【Market & problem】one line
【Advance】mechanism / structural object / counterfactual / theorem
【Method that earns it】structural or reduced-form, named
【IO lesson】competition / regulation / welfare implication
【On page 1?】[Y/N]
【Next step】rje-literature-positioning
Install via CLI
npx skills add https://github.com/brycewang-stanford/Awesome-Journal-Skills --skill rje-contribution-framing
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