jmcb-writing-style
GitHub针对JMCB论文的后期润色技能,聚焦摘要、引言及政策框架。旨在将技术性叙述转化为符合央行/监管者阅读习惯的政策导向表达,强调机制解释与经济幅度,避免过度方法化或松散评论,提升专业受众的共鸣与政策启示清晰度。
Trigger Scenarios
Install
npx skills add brycewang-stanford/Awesome-Journal-Skills --skill jmcb-writing-style -g -y
SKILL.md
Frontmatter
{
"name": "jmcb-writing-style",
"description": "Use when the prose — abstract, introduction, and the policy framing — is the bottleneck for a Journal of Money, Credit and Banking (JMCB) manuscript. Makes the monetary\/banking idea and its policy payoff land for a specialist-but-policy audience; it is a late-stage polish, not a substitute for fixing the analysis."
}
Writing Style (jmcb-writing-style)
When to trigger
- The abstract states what you did but not what a central banker or regulator should conclude
- The introduction reaches the contribution only on page three
- The prose is technically correct but reads like a working paper, not a policy-relevant article
- Results are described ("the coefficient is significant") rather than interpreted (what it means for transmission/policy)
- The paper is at the 40-page cap and the writing is the place to recover space
The JMCB voice
JMCB readers are monetary/banking specialists who also think in policy terms. The house voice is precise about mechanism and institutions, explicit about magnitudes, and never loses the policy payoff. The best JMCB papers tell the reader, early and plainly, what a central bank or regulator should believe differently — and then back it with disciplined evidence. Avoid both extremes: the dense methods-paper voice that hides the policy point, and the loose op-ed voice that overstates it. Magnitudes, not just signs and stars, carry the message.
The introduction (the highest-leverage page)
Write the JMCB intro as a tight funnel — aim for roughly this arc in the first two pages:
- The policy/economic question, framed so a money/credit/banking reader sees the stakes immediately.
- What we do — the data and the identification, in two or three sentences, with the key institutional/timing fact.
- What we find — the headline with its magnitude ("a 100bp tightening cuts low-capital-bank lending 1.8%"), not just "we find a significant effect."
- Why it is identified — one sentence on the variation and the main threat you defuse.
- The contribution vs. the frontier — the one-sentence delta (hand off to
jmcb-literature-positioningif fuzzy). - The policy takeaway — what a policymaker should conclude.
The abstract
- ≤ ~150 words is a safe target (待核实 — confirm the current limit on the official page); lead with the question and the headline magnitude, not the method.
- Name the mechanism and the policy implication. A JMCB abstract that omits the policy payoff undersells the paper.
Prose discipline
- Interpret, don't just report. Every key number gets an economic reading in monetary/banking terms.
- Foreground institutions and timing — JMCB rewards papers that show they understand the plumbing.
- Cut hedging and throat-clearing — this also reclaims pages under the 40-page recommendation.
- Use author-year citations consistent with the journal's style; keep the reference list disciplined since it counts toward the page recommendation.
Writing the results section for a policy reader
The results section is where JMCB papers most often slip into report-mode. Three habits keep it interpretive:
- Lead each result with its economic meaning, then the number. "Lending at low-capital banks contracts sharply — 1.8% per 100bp — while well-capitalized banks are unaffected," not "the interaction term is −0.018 (p<0.01)."
- Benchmark every headline magnitude. Situate it against the canonical estimate ("larger than the 1.1% in [prior], consistent with our tighter demand controls") so the reader can judge plausibility.
- Translate to the policy unit. Convert coefficients into the quantity a policymaker thinks in — basis points of pass-through, share of transmission attributable to the channel, a welfare or output number.
Length as a writing discipline
The ~40-page recommendation (including references, tables, and figures) makes prose economy a real constraint, not a nicety. The cheapest pages to reclaim are: hedged throat-clearing ("It is worth noting that…"), restated results that the table already shows, over-long literature paragraphs that a contrast sentence could replace, and method exposition that belongs in the online appendix. Cutting these usually improves the paper — a tight monetary/banking argument reads as more confident — while protecting space for the exhibits and robustness that carry the result.
Checklist
- Abstract leads with the question + headline magnitude and names the policy implication
- Introduction delivers question → method → finding-with-magnitude → identification → contribution → policy in ~2 pages
- Every key result is interpreted in monetary/banking/policy terms, not just reported
- Institutions and timing are visible; the paper shows it knows the plumbing
- Magnitudes carry the message; significance language never substitutes for economic size
- Author-year citations; reference list kept tight against the 40-page recommendation
- Hedging and redundancy cut to recover length
Anti-patterns
- An abstract that says "we study the effect of monetary policy on lending" with no magnitude and no policy takeaway
- A buried lede — the contribution arriving on page three of the introduction
- Reporting significance ("p < 0.01") in place of interpreting the economic magnitude
- Op-ed overreach: drawing sweeping policy conclusions the local/identified estimate cannot support
- Methods-paper density that obscures, for a policy reader, why the result matters
- A bloated reference list and hedged prose pushing the paper over the recommended length
The conclusion as a policy statement
JMCB conclusions are often wasted on a summary the abstract already gave. Use the conclusion to state, plainly, what a central banker or regulator should take away and what the result does not license. A strong JMCB close names the policy implication, the scope conditions (the regime, the sample, the local nature of the estimate), and the open question the paper leaves — turning the last page into the one a policy reader remembers.
Worked vignette (illustrative)
A draft abstract reads: "Using bank-level data, we estimate the response of lending to monetary policy and find statistically significant effects." The JMCB rewrite: "A 100bp monetary tightening reduces lending by 1.8% at banks in the lowest capital quartile but leaves well-capitalized banks unchanged, implying that bank capital shapes the strength of monetary transmission — a margin policymakers can target through capital regulation." Same result; now the question, the magnitude, the mechanism, and the policy payoff are all on the page.
Output format
【Journal】Journal of Money, Credit and Banking
【Skill】jmcb-writing-style
【Abstract】leads with question + magnitude + policy implication? [Y/N]
【Intro funnel】question→method→finding(magnitude)→ID→contribution→policy in ~2pp? [Y/N]
【Interpretation】key numbers read in policy/banking terms, not just reported? [Y/N]
【Magnitude over stars】economic size carries the message? [Y/N]
【Length】hedging/refs trimmed toward the 40-page recommendation? [Y/N]
【Next skill】jmcb-submission
Version History
- 1839142 Current 2026-07-05 13:51


