《中国财政与经济研究(英文版)》投稿须知
Instructions for Authors
The quarterly China Finance and Economic Review (CFER) is a general-interest peer-reviewed economics journal. Sponsored by National Academy of Economic Strategy, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, the CFER aims to promote high-quality and innovative economic research and to provide a platform for idea exchange and collaboration between Chinese economists and their overseas peers. It welcomes the submission of papers, critical surveys and review articles in the theoretical, applied and policy areas of economics and finance.
The China Finance and Economic Review publishes articles mainly on China’s macro economic analysis and national strategy of economic development and public policy, featuring the policy-oriented research in the field of finance and economics, highlighting the significance of some major issues in China’s finance and economics, and arguing about the corresponding policies. The key columns of CFER involve Macro Economics, Public Finance, Monetary Economics, Industrial Economics, International Trade, Labor Economics and Regional Economics.
Manuscripts should be submitted to the e-mail box: cfer@cass.org.cn.
All submitted articles should be in MS-Word (doc) format and about 7000 words in length, and a Chinese version is preferred.
Manuscripts must be accompanied by an abstract of no more than 150 words, a list of three to six key words, and a brief biographical note about each author, including the author’s title, affiliation, fields of interest, as well as details of the author’s email address.
Tables, figures, and photographs with captions should be electronically supplied with a resolution of no less than 300 dpi.
References in the text and in footnotes should follow the author-date format, for example (Poterba, 2007; Verbist, 2004).
References should be arranged first alphabetically and then further sorted chronologically if necessary and should be typed in the following format:
Gao, P. Y.(2013). Functional orientation and foreseeable prospects of “turning business tax into value added tax.” China Finance and Economic Review, 2(2), 48-62.
Knight, J., & Song-, L. (2007). China’s emerging urban wage structure, 1995-2002. In B. Gustafsson, S. Li, & T. Sicular (Eds.), Inequality and public policy in China. Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press.
Krugman, P. (1988). Exchange rate instability. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
Lesage, J.P. (2008). An introduction to spatial econometrics.
(Available at: http://rei.revues.org/3887(accessed: Mar. 2012))
Stella, P. (2002). Central bank financial strength, transparency, and policy credibility. IMF Working Paper, 137, 1-36.
This journal is also available online, please visit www.chinafinanceandeconomicreview.com to search the articles