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AMERICAN DOMINANCE OF ECONOMIC RESEARCH IS WEAKENING
American economists and economists affiliated to American institutions
dominate the market for publications in top economic journals in
absolute terms. But according to new research by Martin Kocher and
Matthias Sutter, published in the latest issue of the Economic Journal,
when these figures are adjusted for inputs, the gap between the
United States and the rest of the world narrows significantly, with
Israel and the UK emerging particularly favourably. What's more,
over the last 10 years, Europe's influence on economics has begun
to increase at the expense of the United States. This should encourage
a more competitive market in economic thinking.
Kocher and Sutter examine data from the top 15 economic journals
for every fifth year over the period 1977-97. They find that:
American economists account for 72.2% of all publications in those
15 journals with the highest average 'impact factor'. The UK and
Canada follow with a share of 10.2% and 4.7%, respectively. All
other countries account for less than the highest ranked US institutions
- Harvard (3.8%), MIT (3.7%) and Chicago (3.6%).
Concentration is even more severe with regard to authors' PhD origins.
The shares of the United States and the UK increase to 80.6% and
11.4%, respectively, giving grounds for concerns about an 'inbreeding'
of young economists. Institutions in English-speaking countries
account for 93.9% of all PhD affiliations. Most striking is the
comparatively huge share of single American institutions. For example,
MIT's share of PhD affiliations is larger than any single country's
share, with the natural exception of the United States.
The relative impact of the United States has declined in recent
years and the contributions of continental European and UK economists
increased. From 1987-97, the share of US economists' contributions
fell from 77.1 % to 65.8 %, whereas the European share rose from
13.4 % to 23.3 %.
Is the concentration of authors with regard to their institutional
and country origin really as high as these figures and many related
studies suggest? This research provides evidence that the results
are much less alarming when presented in other ways.
Most notably, the above figures do not involve any productivity
considerations. Obviously, there are more professional economists
in the United States than in the UK, for example. Although comparable
data on research inputs in different countries are rare, it is possible
to offer further insights by applying population figures, manpower
figures and the number of universities with at least one economic
department as productivity weights. Using these weights, Kocher
and Sutter find that:
For the authors' affiliation while writing, Israel takes the lead
ahead of the United States and the UK in two of the three resulting
rankings. When the manpower devoted to research in economics is
used as the input, the UK comes out best, followed by Israel and
the United States. But perhaps more importantly, the gap between
the United States and the rest of the world narrows significantly.
The same arguments apply to the PhD affiliations of the authors,
although this category is still led by the United States, again
with the notable exception of manpower weighting, where the UK fares
excellently. Some relatively small European countries, like Sweden
and Norway, score well in comparison to larger continental European
countries.
Kocher and Sutter conclude that the overall picture is not as alarming
as many have suggested. But they do concede that serious considerations
should be assigned to the high concentration of economists' PhD
origins. The establishment of many new PhD programmes in Europe
and the improvements in quality of existing ones are important steps
in the right direction.
Notes for Editors: 'The Institutional Concentration of Authors
in Top Journals of Economics During the Last Two Decades' by Martin
Kocher and Matthias Sutter is published in the June 2001 issue of
the Economic Journal. The authors are at the Institute of Public
Economics, University of Innsbruck.
For Further Information: contact Martin Kocher on 00-43-512-507-7172
(email: martin.kocher@uibk.ac.at); or RES Media Assistant Niall
Flynn on 020-7878-2919 (email: nflynn@cepr.org).
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