Public Finance Review
Now Indexed in the Research Papers in Economics (RePEC) database. Search 2010 issue articles here.
Public Finance Review is a professional forum devoted to economic research, theory, and policy applications, focusing on a variety of allocation, distribution, and stabilization functions within the public sector economy. Economists, policy makers, political scientists, and researchers all rely on Public Finance Review, to bring them the most up-to-date information on the ever-changing issues in public economics, and to help them put policies and research into action.
Public Finance Review presents rigorous empirical and theoretical papers on public economic polices, as well as examining and critiquing their impact and consequences. The journal analyzes the nature and function of evolving governmental fiscal policies at the national, state, and local levels. Each peer-reviewed issue explores a variety of subject areas, bringing you comprehensive coverage of the public sector economy today.
Issues recently examined include social security financing, tax neutrality and social welfare, politics and deficit finance, tax credits for job creation, public education subsidies, mixed outputs of non-profit organizations, government loan guarantees, and distributional effects of social security.
This journal is a member of the Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE).
Submit your manuscript today at https://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/pfr.
Public Finance Review is a scholarly economics journal devoted to policy-oriented economic research and theory, which focuses on a variety of allocation, distribution, and stabilization functions within the public sector economy. Economists, policy makers, political scientists, and researchers all rely on Public Finance Review, to bring them the most up-to-date analysis of the ever changing public finance systems around the world and to help them put policies and research into action. Public Finance Review presents rigorous empirical and theoretical papers on public economic policies, and also examines their impacts and consequences. The journal analyzes the nature and function of evolving governmental fiscal policies at the national, state and local levels, with the goal of providing analysis that it is of interest to an international audience. Each peer-reviewed issue explores a variety of subject areas, bringing comprehensive coverage of the public-sector economy today. Issues recently examined include: social security financing, tax neutrality and social welfare, politics and deficit finance, tax credits for job creation, public education subsidies, mixed outputs of non-profit organizations, government loan guarantees, distributional effects of social security, and intergovernmental fiscal relations.
Gary Wagner | University of Louisiana at Lafayette, USA |
Donald Bruce | University of Tennessee, USA |
Denvil Duncan | Indiana University, USA |
Johannes Emmerling | RFF-CMCC European Institute on Economics and the Environment, Italy |
Andrew Hanson | University of Illinois at Chicago, USA |
Jeremy Jackson | North Dakota State University, USA |
Joao Tovar Jalles | University of Lisbon, Portugal |
Phuong Nguyen-Hoang | University of Iowa, USA |
Matthew Rablen | University of Sheffield, UK |
Cameron Shelton | Claremont McKenna College, USA |
Xueli Tang | Deakin University, Australia |
Fang Yang | Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, USA |
W. Robert Reed | University of Canterbury, New Zealand |
James Alm | Tulane University, USA |
Andrew Caplin | New York University, USA |
James C. Cox | Georgia State University, USA |
Helmuth Cremer | University of Toulouse, France |
Hippolyte d’Albis | Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne & Paris School of Economics, France |
Michael P. Devereux | University of Oxford, UK |
Catherine Eckel | Texas A&M University, USA |
David N. Figlio | Northwestern University, USA |
Vincenzo Galasso | Bocconi University, Italy |
Carlos Garriga | Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, USA |
Volker Grossmann | University of Fribourg, Switzerland |
Christian Hilber | London School of Economics and Political Science, UK |
Ayse Imrohoroglu | University of Southern California, USA |
Bas Jacobs | Erasmus University Rotterdam, Netherlands |
Niels Johannesan | University of Copenhagen, Denmark |
Sagiri Kitao | University of Tokyo, Japan |
Wojciech Kopczuk | Columbia University, USA |
David Laibson | Harvard University, USA |
Ngo Van Long | McGill University, Canada |
David Merriman | University of Illinois at Chicago, USA |
Arno Riedl | Maastricht University, Netherlands |
Andrew A. Samwick | Dartmouth College, USA |
Dan Silverman | Arizona State University, USA |
Joel Slemrod | University of Michigan, USA |
Benno Torgler | Queensland University of Technology, Australia |
Gustavo Ventura | Arizona State University, USA |
Stanley Winer | Carleton University, Canada |
Aaron Yelowitz | University of Kentucky, USA |
George Zodrow | Rice University, USA |
Manuscript submission guidelines can be accessed on Sage Journals.