jmcb-topic-selection
GitHub辅助判断货币政策、银行或宏观金融论文是否适合投稿JMCB,明确期刊偏好与兄弟期刊边界,通过四问法评估研究对象与政策意义,确保选题契合度。
Trigger Scenarios
Install
npx skills add brycewang-stanford/Awesome-Journal-Skills --skill jmcb-topic-selection -g -y
SKILL.md
Frontmatter
{
"name": "jmcb-topic-selection",
"description": "Use when deciding whether a monetary, banking, credit, or macro-finance question belongs at the Journal of Money, Credit and Banking (JMCB) rather than a sibling, and how to frame its policy stakes. Locks the question and outlet fit; it does not invent evidence or citations."
}
Topic Selection (jmcb-topic-selection)
When to trigger
- You have a result on monetary policy, banking, credit, or macro-finance and are unsure JMCB is the right home
- The paper could plausibly go to the Journal of Monetary Economics, AEJ:Macro, RED, or JBF and you need to pick
- A referee or coauthor questioned whether the question is "JMCB enough" — too narrow-finance, too pure-theory, or no policy hook
- The contribution is technically sound but the policy stakes are unstated
What JMCB actually wants
JMCB is the OSU/Wiley monetary-and-banking outlet that bridges policy and the macro-financial system. Founded in 1969 and long associated with the Ohio State University Department of Economics, it has historically prized work that a central bank, regulator, or financial-stability authority would find usable. The papers that land here share three traits: (1) the object of study is money, credit, banks, or the monetary/financial-policy machinery — not corporate finance or asset pricing for its own sake; (2) there is a clear policy or institutional payoff — a decision-maker would care about the answer; (3) the method is either a quantitative monetary/banking model or credible empirics, and the timing/institutions are made explicit. A purely methodological contribution with no monetary/banking application, or a banking-data paper with no transmission/credit/policy mechanism, is a poor fit.
Sibling boundary — pick the right outlet before you write the intro
| If the paper's core is… | It likely belongs at… | JMCB fits only if… |
|---|---|---|
| A new macro/monetary theory or method, deep field-macro | Journal of Monetary Economics | the model is built to answer a concrete monetary/banking-policy question |
| General-interest macro for a broad audience | AEJ:Macro | the contribution is specifically about money/credit/banking transmission |
| Quantitative dynamic GE, business-cycle methodology | Review of Economic Dynamics | the dynamics are in service of a monetary/credit mechanism |
| Bank risk, regulation, micro-banking with no macro/policy bridge | Journal of Banking & Finance | the bank result speaks to transmission, credit supply, or systemic policy |
| Asset pricing / corporate finance | JF / JFE / RFS / JFI | money/credit/central-bank policy is the driving force, not a control |
The JMCB sweet spot is the intersection: bank-level credit-supply responses to a monetary shock; the deposit channel of policy; reserve/liquidity regulation and lending; sovereign-bank doom loops; central-bank balance-sheet policy and term premia; payment systems and money demand.
A four-question fit screen
- Object. Is money, credit, a bank balance sheet, or the policy apparatus the dependent mechanism — not a covariate? If no, reconsider the venue.
- Policy payoff. Can you name the decision-maker (FOMC, ECB, a prudential regulator) and the lever your result informs in one sentence?
- Mechanism, not correlation. Is there a transmission channel (rate → bank funding → lending → real activity, or a credit-friction wedge) you can show, not just an association?
- Comparative advantage. What does JMCB's audience get here that the sibling's audience would not value as much? If the honest answer is "nothing," route to the sibling.
Topics that fit, and how to angle marginal ones
Strong-fit territory: the bank lending and deposits channels of monetary policy; credit-supply effects of capital and liquidity regulation; central-bank balance-sheet and QE transmission; reserve and reference-rate (e.g., SOFR transition) plumbing; the sovereign-bank nexus; money demand and payment systems; financial-stability policy and the macro-credit cycle.
Marginal topics can still fit if re-angled:
- A corporate-finance result fits if the bank/credit-supply channel is the driver, not a control — foreground the intermediary.
- An asset-pricing result fits if monetary policy or intermediary frictions move the prices — foreground the policy/intermediation mechanism.
- A pure-theory monetary model fits if it produces a quantitative, policy-relevant counterfactual — foreground the policy experiment, not the theorem.
Scoping feasibility before you commit
Before locking the topic, check that the data and identification are actually attainable: many JMCB-natural questions require restricted bank or central-bank data (supervisory panels, credit registers, RDC access). If the clean identification needs data you cannot get, the topic is not yet feasible — either secure the access path or re-scope to public data (Call Reports, Y-9C, FRED, ALFRED real-time vintages) that can still carry the mechanism. Decide this now, not after months of writing.
Quick desk-reject screen
Before investing in the design, run the paper against the reasons JMCB editors decline without review: the object is finance/macro generally, with money/credit/banks only incidental; the contribution is purely methodological with no monetary/banking application; the result is a correlation with no transmission or credit mechanism; or the question is too narrow to interest a policy-minded monetary audience. If any of these fits, either re-angle toward the mechanism and policy payoff, or route to the better-matched sibling now rather than after a desk reject (which costs the submission fee minus US$50 — 检索于 2026-06;以官网为准).
Checklist
- The question is about money, credit, banks, or monetary/financial policy as the mechanism, not a setting
- A named policy or institutional payoff is stated in one sentence
- The chosen venue beats JME / AEJ:Macro / RED / JBF for this paper, with the reason written down
- The transmission or credit-friction channel is identifiable, not just a reduced-form correlation
- Data/sample feasibility checked (restricted bank or central-bank data access path scoped if needed)
- The 40-page recommended length is realistic for the scope, or the cut is planned
- Process facts cited from
resources/official-source-map.mdor marked 待核实
Anti-patterns
- A banking-data paper with no transmission, credit-supply, or policy mechanism — reads as JBF, not JMCB
- A monetary model whose only contribution is technical, with no policy counterfactual — reads as JME or RED
- "Policy relevance" asserted in the abstract but never operationalized into a lever or counterfactual
- Choosing JMCB because two siblings desk-rejected, without re-framing the question to JMCB's strengths
- Inventing editor names, fees, or page limits instead of marking volatile facts 待核实
Worked vignette (illustrative)
A researcher has firm-level data showing that firms borrowing from weakly capitalized banks invested less after 2008. As a corporate-finance paper this is a JFE/RFS story about financing constraints. The JMCB re-angle: make the bank the unit of mechanism — show that the investment drop reflects a contraction in credit supply from undercapitalized banks transmitting the crisis, and tie it to the policy lever (bank recapitalization and capital regulation as macro-stabilization tools). Same data, but now the object is the bank lending channel and the payoff is a regulatory one — a clean JMCB fit rather than a finance-journal one.
Lock the question in one sentence before moving on
The deliverable of this stage is a single sentence a JMCB editor would recognize as in-scope: "[object: money/credit/bank/policy] → [mechanism: transmission/credit-friction channel] → [policy payoff: lever a named decision-maker controls]." If you cannot fill all three slots, the topic is not yet ready to hand to jmcb-literature-positioning; the missing slot tells you what to fix — a vague object means reroute, a missing mechanism means deepen the design, a missing payoff means re-angle toward policy.
Output format
【Journal】Journal of Money, Credit and Banking
【Skill】jmcb-topic-selection
【Verdict】fit / reframe / reroute-to-sibling
【One-sentence question】monetary/banking/credit/macro-finance object + policy payoff
【Policy payoff】decision-maker + lever the result informs
【Mechanism】transmission or credit-friction channel (not a correlation)
【Sibling boundary】why JMCB beats JME / AEJ:Macro / RED / JBF here
【Source status】verified URL / 待核实 / not asserted
【Next skill】jmcb-literature-positioning
Version History
- 1839142 Current 2026-07-05 13:51


