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Impact Factor
2.1

5 year Impact Factor
4.4

Economics
200 out of 597
 

Managing Editor

Christopher Adam 

Editorial Board

About the journal

The Oxford Review of Economic Policy is a refereed journal which is published quarterly. Each issue concentrates on a current theme in economic policy, with a balance between macro- and microeconomics, and comprises an assessment and a number of articles.

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brexit

The economics of Brexit: What is at stake?

This Special Issue brings together economic experts to identify the principal questions and possible effects of Brexit on economic policy.

Watch videos with the issue's authors discussing their research or read the full issue online.

Oxford Review of Economic Policy

What does the Oxford Review of Economic Policy (OxREP) stand for and why should you read it?

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Cameron Hepburn on Climate change policy after Brexit

Learn more about the implications of the referendum and, eventually, of Brexit for the economics of climate change in the UK, the EU, and beyond.

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Thomas Sampson on the post-Brexit trade negotiations

Learn more about the main options for future UK–EU trade relations.

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Catherine Barnard on Law and Brexit

Learn more about some of the legal issues which will frame the Brexit negotiations.

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From the OUPblog

grains plant

Food and agriculture: shifting landscapes for policy

Where does our food come from? A popular slogan tells us that our food comes from farms: “If you ate today, thank a farmer.” Supermarkets cater to the same idea, labelling every bag of produce with the name of an individual farm…

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architecture blue building business

Field experimenting in economics: Lessons learned for public policy

Do neighbourhoods matter to outcomes? Which classroom interventions improve educational attainment? How should we raise money to provide important and valued public goods?...

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coins

Unconventional monetary policy

Central banks in advanced economies typically conduct monetary policy by varying short-term interest rates in order to influence the level of spending and inflation in the economy. One limitation of this conventional approach to monetary policy is the so called lower bound problem…

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westminster station

The good, the bad, the missed opportunities

Popular perceptions of governments’ economic records are often shaped by the specific events that precipitate their downfall. From devaluation crises in the 1960s, through industrial relations in the 1970s, to the debacle of the poll tax in the 1990s…

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