jimf-literature-positioning
GitHub用于指导JIMF论文定位,针对引言贡献模糊或审稿人质疑新颖性时,通过精准对标2-3篇前沿文献并明确边际创新(机制、识别、测量等),避免泛泛而谈,提升拒稿风险下的竞争力。
Trigger Scenarios
Install
npx skills add brycewang-stanford/Awesome-Journal-Skills --skill jimf-literature-positioning -g -y
SKILL.md
Frontmatter
{
"name": "jimf-literature-positioning",
"description": "Use when staking a Journal of International Money and Finance (JIMF) manuscript's contribution against the international-finance frontier and its sibling journals. Sharpens positioning; it does not invent evidence, exemplars, or citations."
}
Literature Positioning (jimf-literature-positioning)
When to trigger
- The intro lists related work but never says what this paper does that the frontier does not
- A referee writes "this is close to [Rey on the global financial cycle / Gopinath on dominant currency / Miranda-Agrippino-Rey on spillovers] — what is new?"
- The contribution reads as "we extend X to country Y / sample Z" rather than a new object
- The paper could be read as a JIE, JME, or JFE contribution and the JIMF claim is not staked
How JIMF expects positioning to be built
JIMF is a field journal, so positioning is judged against the international monetary-finance literature specifically, not all of macro or all of finance. The bar is: name the closest two or three papers, state the precise margin on which you move past them, and show the margin matters for an open-economy question. The frontier clusters into recognizable programs — the global financial cycle and the trilemma/dilemma debate; dominant-currency pricing and exchange-rate pass-through; monetary-policy spillovers and the international transmission channel; capital-flow push vs. pull and the literature on capital controls / FX intervention; sovereign risk, original sin, and external debt; and international asset pricing (UIP deviations, carry, currency risk premia). Locate your paper in one of these and differentiate within it.
The discipline this imposes: you are not differentiating from "the literature," you are differentiating from the two or three specific papers a JIMF referee in your sub-program will have in mind. Identify them honestly — they are usually the ones you most wish did not exist — and make the margin against them precise. A positioning that survives contact with the closest competitor survives the referee.
| Positioning move | Strong version (JIMF-credible) | Weak version (desk-reject risk) |
|---|---|---|
| New mechanism | "Prior work attributes flow reversals to the GFCy; we show the bank-lending channel does the work" | "We add bank variables to a flows regression" |
| New identification | "Prior cross-country OLS is confounded; we use a foreign policy surprise as an instrument" | "We use the same panel with more controls" |
| New measurement | "We construct invoicing-currency-level pass-through, not aggregate ERPT" | "We use a longer sample of aggregate ERPT" |
| New external validity | "The dominant-currency result was US-centric; we test it for EM exporters" | "We replicate the result for one more country" |
| Reconciling a puzzle | "We reconcile the trilemma vs. dilemma debate via the regime margin" | "We restate both sides without adjudicating" |
Positioning a policy paper vs. an academic paper
The same result can be positioned two ways, and JIMF accepts both — but pick one and commit. A policy-led positioning differentiates on external validity, country coverage, and the bounded implication for a central bank or the IMF; its closest competitors are other policy-relevant cross-country studies, and its contribution is often "we provide the first credible estimate for the relevant policy population." An academic-led positioning differentiates on identification or a new object; its competitors are the methodological frontier papers, and its contribution is "we identify what prior work could only correlate." A paper that tries to be both at once usually convinces neither referee; lead with one and let the other be a benefit.
Drawing the sibling boundary in the intro
Spend one or two sentences placing the paper against the journal that could plausibly claim it. Against JIE: emphasize the monetary/financial (not real-trade) channel. Against JME/JMCB: emphasize the cross-border/open-economy margin (not domestic monetary policy). Against JFE/RF: emphasize the international risk or exchange-rate object (not a closed-economy asset-pricing puzzle). This is not throat-clearing — it is how a JIMF editor confirms the paper is theirs.
Structuring the related-work section
JIMF does not reward an exhaustive survey; it rewards a map with your pin on it. Group the literature into the two or three streams your paper touches, give each stream one sentence and its representative paper, then place yourself. A useful shape: "Three strands bear on this question. The first [stream + 1 cite] establishes X but takes Y as given. The second [stream + 1 cite] relaxes Y but in a closed economy. We sit at their intersection: [your move]." This signals command of the field without burning four pages, and it makes the gap visible rather than asserted.
When you cite a foundational result, cite it precisely: the global-financial-cycle and monetary-autonomy claim, the dominant-currency-paradigm pass-through result, the high-frequency monetary-spillover finding, the original-sin / sovereign-external-debt argument — each has a specific paper and a specific claim, and an international-finance referee will notice a loose attribution. Precision here buys credibility for the whole positioning.
A practical test for the related-work draft: hand it to a colleague who works in a different field and ask them to state, in one sentence, what your paper adds. If they cannot, the positioning is buried in the survey and needs the pin made explicit — the contribution sentence should be findable without reading the whole section.
Worked vignette (illustrative)
A draft on exchange-rate pass-through opens with a twelve-paragraph survey and never states what is new; a referee writes "this is Gopinath-style dominant-currency pass-through with more countries." The JIMF fix: collapse the survey into three labeled strands (aggregate ERPT; dominant-currency pricing; invoicing-currency heterogeneity), name one representative paper for each, and stake the pin: "Unlike the aggregate-ERPT literature, and going beyond the dominant-currency result that prices are sticky in dollars, we measure pass-through at the invoicing-currency level within exporters and show the dollar margin is concentrated in a subset of firms — which reconciles the high aggregate stickiness with the firm-level heterogeneity." The contribution is now one sentence against named work, and the positioning section is a page, not five.
Referee pushback mapped to the positioning fix
- "How is this different from [the obvious frontier paper]?" → A one-sentence contribution statement naming that paper and the exact margin (mechanism / identification / measurement / external validity).
- "This is a known cross-country regression with more data." → Reframe around a new object or design, or reroute the paper if there is genuinely no new margin.
- "Why JIMF and not JIE/JME?" → The explicit sibling-boundary sentence, plus a title and intro that lead with the monetary-financial international channel.
- "You mis-state the global-financial-cycle / trilemma claim." → Cite the foundational result precisely (what it does and does not say) before differentiating from it.
Checklist
- The two or three closest international-finance papers are named, not gestured at
- The contribution is one sentence: "Unlike [closest work], we [margin], which matters because [open-economy stake]"
- The margin is a mechanism, identification, measurement, external validity, or puzzle-resolution — not "more data"
- The relevant program (GFCy / DCP-ERPT / spillovers / flows-controls / sovereign / international AP) is named
- The sibling boundary (vs. JIE / JME / JMCB / JFE) is drawn explicitly
- Foundational results (GFCy / dominant-currency / spillover / trilemma) are cited precisely, not loosely
- The related-work section is a map with your pin on it, not a 30-paper survey
- Policy-led vs. academic-led positioning chosen and committed to (not both at once)
- The closest competitor — the paper you wish did not exist — is named and out-positioned
- Cited facts about the journal come from
resources/official-source-map.mdor are marked 待核实
Anti-patterns
- A literature section that summarizes 30 papers and differentiates from none
- Claiming novelty against the broad macro/finance literature while ignoring the specific JIMF frontier paper a referee will cite
- "First paper to study X in country Y" as the entire contribution
- Hiding the contribution in the conclusion instead of staking it in the intro
- Citing a famous result imprecisely (mis-attributing the GFCy, dominant-currency, or trilemma claim) — referees in this field will catch it
- Inventing a convenient citation to fill a gap rather than marking the gap
Output format
【Journal】Journal of International Money and Finance
【Skill】jimf-literature-positioning
【Verdict】staked / sharpen / reroute
【Frontier program】GFCy / DCP-ERPT / spillovers / flows-controls / sovereign / international AP
【Closest work】<2-3 named papers>
【Contribution sentence】"Unlike __, we __, which matters because __"
【Sibling boundary】why not JIE / JME / JMCB / JFE
【Source status】verified / 待核实
【Next skill】jimf-identification
Version History
- 1839142 Current 2026-07-05 13:43


