About the Journal
The Oxford Review of Economic Policy is a quarterly refereed journal. Each issue is built around a specific theme in economics and economic policy and comprises an editorial Assessment and a number of commissioned articles. While the analysis is challenging and at the forefront of current thinking, articles are presented in non-technical language to make them readily accessible to all readers. The Oxford Review is aimed at a wide audience including government, business and policy-makers, as well as academics and students. It is required reading for those who need to know where research is leading. For almost four decades, the Oxford Review has attracted contributions from leading scholars from across the world, from established Nobel Laureates to young and emerging scholars working at the frontiers of economic policy research.
Issues
Forthcoming and Commissioned Issues
- Fifty Years on: the Bretton Woods System
- Taxing the Rich (More)
- Climate Change, Complexity and Policy Design
- Microfinance
2023
- 39(1): New Frontiers of Trade
2022
- 38(1): The Economics of Brexit: Perspectives from a Year After Departure
- 38(2): Economics of Major Projects
- 38(3): Forced Migration
- 38(4): Economics of Pandemic Vaccination
2021
- 37(1): Regional Inequalities
- 37(2): Management Practices
- 37(3): Artificial Intelligence
- 37(4): Capitalism: What Has Gone Wrong, What Needs to Change, and How Can It Be Fixed?
2020
- 36(1): Economics of Water
- 36(2): Corporate Ownership
- 36 (Supplement): The Economics of the COVID-19 Pandemic
- 36(3): Rebuilding macroeconomic theory II
- 36(4): Gender Economics
2019
- 35(1): Natural Capital
- 35(2): The Age of Electricity
- 35(3): Inequality
- 35(4): Networks and Economic Policy
2018
- 34(1-2): Rebuilding Macroeconomic Theory
- 34(3): Technology and the Labour Market
- 34(4): Entrepreneurship
2017
- 33(1): Innovation
- 33(suppl_1): Economic Consequences of Brexit
- 33(2): Responsible Business
- 33(3): Urbanization
- 33(4): Market Design
2016
- 32(1): Economics of Global Health
- 32(2): The Future of Fossil Fuels
- 32(3): Infrastructure, Assets, and Accounting
- 32(4): Economics of Higher Education
2015
- 31(1): Food
- 31(2): Thirtieth Anniversary Issue
- 31(3-4): Financing for Development
2014
- 30(1): Wealth
- 30(2): Scotland and Small Country Independence
- 30(3): Green Growth
- 30(4): Field Experiments to Address Developed World Policy Issues
2013
- 29(1): The Economic Record of the 1997–2010 Labour Government
- 29(2): Government and Business—A New Industrial Policy?
- 29(3): Sovereign Debt (double issue)
- 29(4): Sovereign Debt (double issue)
2012
- 28(1): Biodiversity
- 28(2): Crisis-era protectionism and the multilateral governance of trade
- 28(3): International Macroeconomic Policy Coordination
- 28(4): Unconventional Monetary Policy
2011
- 27(1): Oil and International Energy Markets
- 27(2): Unemployment
- 27(3): Banking, Finance, and the Role of the State
- 27(4): The Economic Borders of the State
2010
- 26(1): Macroeconomics of the Global Financial Crisis: Monetary and Fiscal Responses
- 26(2): Environmental Policy, Government and the Market
- 26(3): Lessons from the 1930s
- 26(4): The Economics of Ageing
2009
- 25(1): Capitalism and Inequality
- 25(2): The Political Economy of Development
- 25(3): Infrastructure, Utilities, and Regulation
- 25(4): Macroeconomics of the Global Financial Crisis: How We Got Here
2008
- 24(1): Housing Markets and the Economy
- 24(2): Climate Change
- 24(3): Labour Migration in Europe
- 24(4): Business Taxation in a Globalized World
2007
- 23(1): The Solow Growth Model
- 23(2): India
- 23(3): Trade, Development, and the WTO
- 23(4): Intellectual Property
2006
- 22(1): Pensions
- 22(2): Regulation
- 22(3): Fiscal Restraint and the Welfare State
- 22(4): Productivity
2005
- 21(1): The New Energy Paradigm
- 21(2): Corporate Governance
- 21(3): Gender and the Life Cycle
- 21(4): Fiscal Policy
2004
- 20(1): How far has Globalization gone?
- 20(2): Education
- 20(3): Firm-level Adjustment to Globalization
- 20(4): European Financial Integration
2003
- 19(1): EMU, Four Years On
- 19(2): Financing and Managing Public Services
- 19(3): Climate-Change Policy
- 19(4): Economics of Sport
2002
- 18(1): Technology Policy
- 18(2): The Economic Record of the Labour Government Since 1997
- 18(3): The New Economy
- 18(4): Games and Coordination
Abstracting and Indexing Services
Oxford Review of Economic Policy is covered by the following abstracting and indexing services:
CAB Abstracts
Current Contents® /Social and Behavioral Sciences
EconLit
Emerald Management Reviews
Expanded academic ASAP
Forestry Abstracts
Geographical Abstracts
IBSS
Infotrac
International Bibliography of the Social Sciences
International Development Abstracts
International Development Abstracts
Jounal of Economic Literature
Journal Citation Reports /Social Sciences Edition
Periodicals Archive Online (PAO)
Periodicals Index Online (PIO)
PROQUEST DATABASE : ABI/INFORM Complete
PROQUEST DATABASE : ABI/INFORM Global
PROQUEST DATABASE : ABI/INFORM Research
PROQUEST DATABASE : ProQuest 5000
PROQUEST DATABASE : ProQuest 5000 International
PROQUEST DATABASE : ProQuest Central
PROQUEST DATABASE : ProQuest European Business
PROQUEST DATABASE : ProQuest Pharma Collection
Public Affairs Information Services (PAIS)
RePEc (Research Papers in Economics)
Social Science Research Network (SSRN)
Social Sciences Citation Index®
Social Scisearch®
World Agricultural Economics and Rural Sociology Abstracts
Impact Factor and Ranking
Year | Impact Factor | Ssi: Economics |
---|---|---|
2023 | 2.1 | 200 out of 597 |
2022 | 6.8 | 26 out of 380 |
2021 | 6.326 | 34 out of 379 |
2020 | 3.908 | 66 out of 377 |
2019 | 3.438 | 43 out of 371 |
2018 | 2.392 | 70 out of 363 |
2017 | 1.444 | 128 out of 353 |
2016 | 1.194 | 129 out of 347 |
2015 | 0.764 | 187 out of 344 |
2014 | 1.042 | 136 out of 333 |
2013 | 1.029 | 128 out of 332 |
2012 | 0.875 | 151 out of 332 |
2011 | 0.781 | 158 out of 320 |
2010 | 1.703 | 50 out of 304 |
2009 | 0.809 | 110 out of 245 |
2008 | 0.642 | 128 out of 209 |
2007 | 0.552 | 109 out of 191 |
2006 | 0.725 | 80 out of 175 |
This information is taken from the Journal Citation Reports™ (Clarivate, 2024).