jmcb-literature-positioning
GitHub针对JMCB论文,精准定位其货币、银行及宏观金融领域的边际贡献。通过锚定经典机制、区分交叉文献、明确对比近作并强调政策含义,强化“新颖性与期刊匹配度”主张,避免模糊表述。
Trigger Scenarios
Install
npx skills add brycewang-stanford/Awesome-Journal-Skills --skill jmcb-literature-positioning -g -y
SKILL.md
Frontmatter
{
"name": "jmcb-literature-positioning",
"description": "Use when staking a Journal of Money, Credit and Banking (JMCB) manuscript's contribution against the monetary, banking, and macro-finance literature and its sibling journals. Sharpens the \"what is new and why JMCB\" claim; it does not invent citations or evidence."
}
Literature Positioning (jmcb-literature-positioning)
When to trigger
- The contribution paragraph reads as "we add bank-level data to a known result" without a sharp delta
- A referee or coauthor cannot tell what JMCB readers learn that they did not already know
- The paper sits between two literatures (e.g., monetary transmission and banking) and cites neither's frontier well
- You are unsure whether the closest prior work is at JMCB, JME, AEJ:Macro, RED, or JBF
The JMCB positioning bar
JMCB referees are monetary/banking specialists who know the canonical mechanisms cold — the bank lending channel (Bernanke–Blinder, Kashyap–Stein), the financial accelerator (Bernanke–Gertler–Gilchrist), high-frequency monetary identification (Kuttner; Gertler–Karadi; Nakamura–Steinsson), the deposits channel (Drechsler–Savov–Schnabl), and the information effect (Jarociński–Karadi). Positioning here is not a literature dump; it is a precise statement of which mechanism you sharpen, overturn, or measure, and why a money/credit/banking audience should care. The contribution must survive the question "what would the field believe differently after reading this?"
This bar is sharper than at a general-interest journal because the audience is specialized: a referee already knows the channel and the closest five papers, so a vague "we contribute to the literature on X" lands as filler. The contribution has to be stated as a position relative to named work — what you confirm in a new setting, what you overturn, what you measure that was previously only assumed.
How to build the contribution
- Anchor to the canonical mechanism, then state your delta. Name the channel your paper speaks to and say in one sentence what is new: a new shock, a new wedge, a new margin, a new dataset that resolves a known ambiguity, or a counterfactual nobody has run.
- Separate the three literatures you might be bridging. Most JMCB papers live at an intersection (transmission × banking, credit × macro, policy × financial stability). Cite the frontier of each strand and say where you connect them.
- Locate the closest 3–5 papers and differentiate explicitly. Vague "we complement X" invites a referee to say "this is just X." State the marginal contribution as a contrast, not a list.
- Tie the contribution to a policy or institutional payoff. JMCB rewards work that moves a central-bank or regulatory understanding; make that explicit, not implied.
Sibling-aware framing
The same result reads differently depending on the audience. For JMCB, foreground the monetary/credit/policy mechanism, not the econometric novelty (that framing belongs to a methods journal) and not the firm-finance angle (that belongs to JBF/JFI). When a reviewer might think "this is a JME paper," answer it in the intro: state the policy or measurement payoff that makes it a JMCB paper. When they might think "this is JBF," foreground the transmission/systemic dimension.
Common positioning patterns and the contrast that lands
- "New data on a known mechanism." The data alone is not the contribution; the contribution is the ambiguity the data resolves. State what was previously contested (e.g., whether the bank lending channel survives in a deposit-insured system) and how your data settles it.
- "New shock for an old channel." Frontier monetary identification (info-robust surprises, narrative series) applied to transmission — the delta is the cleaner shock and what it changes about the estimated channel, not the shock per se.
- "A friction the canonical model omits." Name the omitted margin (e.g., deposit market power, intermediary leverage constraints) and what its inclusion changes for policy.
- "Re-examination in a new regime." ZLB, QE, or post-Basel-III re-estimation — the contribution is whether the canonical mechanism holds when the regime changes, not the re-run itself.
For each, the move that satisfies a JMCB referee is the contrast sentence: "Unlike [closest paper], which [limitation], we [what is new], implying [what changes]." A literature section without that sentence for the 2–3 nearest papers reads as a survey, not a contribution.
Calibrating the citation set
JMCB referees expect both the seminal references (so they see you know the lineage) and the current frontier (so they see the paper is not five years stale). Cite the foundational channel paper, the most-cited recent methodological reference your design uses, and the 2–3 papers a referee would consider closest competitors. Omitting an obvious competitor is the single fastest way to draw a hostile report; if a near-rival exists, cite it and differentiate rather than hoping it goes unnoticed.
A practical heuristic: the likeliest referees are the authors of your closest 3–5 papers. Position so that each of them, reading your differentiation, would agree it is fair — neither dismissive of their work nor a re-run of it. Engaging their contribution generously while stating your distinct delta is what converts a potential adversary into a supportive reviewer.
Keep the citation set disciplined for length, too: the reference list counts toward the ~40-page recommendation, so cite what does positioning work and resist the urge to pad the bibliography for appearance.
Where positioning lives in the paper
JMCB positioning is carried in two places, and both must agree. The introduction states the contribution as a single delta sentence and names the policy payoff; the related-literature paragraph or section does the careful differentiation against the 3–5 closest papers. A common failure is an ambitious intro claim ("we are first to show…") that the literature section then quietly undercuts by citing a near-identical predecessor. Make the two consistent: if a close competitor exists, the intro should already be framed as a refinement, extension, or correction of it, not as a first.
Checklist
- The canonical mechanism the paper speaks to is named, with its seminal references
- The one-sentence delta says what the field believes differently after this paper
- The closest 3–5 papers are cited and differentiated by contrast, not just listed
- If bridging literatures, each strand's frontier is cited; the connection is explicit
- A policy/institutional payoff is tied to the contribution
- The framing foregrounds money/credit/banking, distinguishing JMCB from JME / AEJ:Macro / JBF
- No invented citations; volatile facts marked 待核实 per
resources/official-source-map.md
Anti-patterns
- "We are the first to use [dataset]" presented as the contribution — data novelty is not a mechanism
- A literature wall that lists everyone and differentiates from no one
- Citing only one strand when the paper plainly bridges two (referees from the other strand will notice)
- Framing the delta as econometric cleverness when JMCB rewards the monetary/credit insight
- Overclaiming "this overturns X" when the result merely qualifies X in one regime
Worked vignette (illustrative)
A paper estimates the deposits channel of monetary policy with branch-level data. The first contribution paragraph says "we provide new evidence on the deposits channel using granular data." A JMCB referee would read that as incremental. The repositioning: anchor to Drechsler–Savov–Schnabl as the canonical deposits-channel reference, then state the delta as a contrast — "Unlike prior work that infers the channel from county-level deposit flows, our branch-level data isolate within-bank-across-market variation, showing the channel operates through branch market power rather than bank-level pricing, which implies antitrust and branching policy, not just rate policy, shapes transmission." Now the canonical lineage, the precise delta, and the policy payoff are all explicit, and the contribution is unmistakably a JMCB one.
A test before you submit
Ask a coauthor to read only the abstract and the contribution paragraph, then state in one sentence what the field believes differently. If they cannot, the positioning is not yet sharp enough — the delta is buried or the policy payoff is missing. Iterate until that one sentence comes back cleanly, because that is exactly the sentence a referee will use (or fail to find) when writing the report.
Output format
【Journal】Journal of Money, Credit and Banking
【Skill】jmcb-literature-positioning
【Canonical mechanism】channel + seminal refs the paper engages
【One-sentence delta】what the field believes differently afterward
【Closest work】3–5 papers + the explicit contrast to each
【Bridge】which literatures are joined and where they connect
【Policy payoff】who acts differently given the contribution
【Sibling boundary】why this is a JMCB contribution, not JME / AEJ:Macro / JBF
【Next skill】jmcb-identification
Version History
- 1839142 Current 2026-07-05 13:51


