ISSN: 0309-166X
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Cambridge Journal of Economics Q2 Unclaimed
Cambridge Journal of Economics is a journal indexed in SJR in Economics and Econometrics with an H index of 98. It has a price of 3000 €. It has an SJR impact factor of 0,953 and it has a best quartile of Q2. It is published in English. It has an SJR impact factor of 0,953.
Type: Journal
Type of Copyright:
Languages: English
Open Access Policy: Open Choice
Type of publications:
Publication frecuency: -
3000 €
Inmediate OANPD
Embargoed OA0 €
Non OAMetrics
0,953
SJR Impact factor98
H Index54
Total Docs (Last Year)160
Total Docs (3 years)3803
Total Refs413
Total Cites (3 years)155
Citable Docs (3 years)2.47
Cites/Doc (2 years)70.43
Ref/DocOther journals with similar parameters
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Energy Journal Q2
Economic Systems Research Q2
Journal of the Economics of Ageing Q2
Journal of Financial Services Research Q2
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Aims and Scope
Best articles by citations
Demand-driven inequality, endogenous saving rate and macroeconomic instability
View moreTransition to fully funded pension schemes: a non-orthodox criticism
View moreThe functions of the family in the great society
View moreConvergence of monetary equivalent of labour times (MELTs) in two Marxian interpretations
View morePost-Keynesianism, socialisation of investment and Swedish wage-earner funds
View moreProfit maximising goes global: the race to the bottom
View moreMalaysian debacle: whose fault?
View moreThe evolution and performance of biotechnology regional systems of innovation
View moreInterpreting the capitalist order before and after the marginalist revolution
View moreThe role of trust and contract in the supply of business advice
View moreThe Lehman Sisters hypothesis
View morePower, competition and the free tradervulgaris
View moreHicks on monetary theory and history: money as endogenous money
View moreThe economic case for international labour standards
View moreUnpaid work and conformity: why care?
View moreCorporate debt, variable retention rate and the appearance of financial fragility
View moreThe Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC) was right: scale-free complex networks and core-periphery patterns in world trade
View moreGender wage inequality in inclusive and exclusive industrial relations systems: a comparison of Argentina and Chile
View moreThe prospects for caring: economic theory and policy analysis
View moreAlternative indicators for predicting the probability of declining inflation: evidence from the US
View moreOn the dynamics of profit-led and wage-led growth
View moreMaurice Dobb, Political Economist(Palgrave Macmillan, 2013)
View moreThe deindustrialisation/tertiarisation hypothesis reconsidered: a subsystem application to the OECD7
View moreRent as a share of product and Sraffa's price equations
View more
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