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Top Journals in Agricultural Economics–2022 Edition

Fresh from the newly released Journal Citations Report, here is the new top 5 of journals in the “agricultural economics and policy” category:

  1. Canadian Journal of Agricultural Economics 11.353
  2. Annual Review of Resource Economics 6.617
  3. Food Policy 6.080
  4. Applied Economic Perspectives and Policy 4.890
  5. European Review of Agricultural Economics 4.448

The number to the right of each journal name is the journal’s impact factor, which has been calculated on the basis of calendar year 2021 citation numbers.

Congratulations to the editors of the CJAE, whose decision to publish a special issue on COVID-19 before anyone else did paid off handsomely (and also demonstrates the power of Stackelberg first movers). Of note is the fact that the CJAE’s new impact factor places them in… the top five of all economics journals! I wish them luck in handling the incoming Old Testament-grade flood of submissions that one would expect this to bring.

Gentle ribbing of my Canadian colleagues aside, this has not been a good year for the AJAE, which I have been co-editing since January 2020, as our impact factor went from 4 to 3.757; our ranking also tumbled to tenth in the Agricultural Economics and Policy category. A small silver lining is the fact that by impact factor, the AJAE is slightly behind the Journal of Health Economics and slightly ahead of the Economic Journal.

Agricultural Value Chains: Some Research Directions

My chapter with Jeff Bloem and Sunghun Lim titled “Producers, Consumers, and Value Chains in Low- and Middle-Income Countries,” which we wrote for the sixth volume of the Handbook of Agricultural Economics, is finally out, and freely available for download until July 12. Get it while you can! (And if you read this after July 12, 2022, email me for a copy.)

Here is an outline of the chapter:

The task of summarizing the literature on agricultural value chains was a monumental one given how much of it there is. That task was made even more monumental because we wanted to summarize both the literature on within-country value chains (i.e., how agricultural commodities go from the farm gate to final consumers or exporters, in section 2), which is what Jeff and I have written about, as well as the literature on between-country value chains (i.e., global value chains, or how agricultural commodities that may be produced in a given country end up consumed in another, in section 3), which is what Sunghun has written about.

Anyone interested in this topic can be brought up to speed by reading sections 1 to 3. But for me, most of the value added of this chapter is in the future research directions we lay out in section 4. This should be of interest to graduate students, early-career researchers, and others interested in working in this area, where new thinking is required, as I have made the case here and there. The research gaps we identify are as follows:

Don’t Believe Everything You Read on the Internet

According to Amazon.com, my book Doing Economics: What You Should Have Learned in Grad School―But Didn’t is either “out of print” or “currently unavailable.” And indeed, this is what I currently see when I go to the book’s Amazon page:

Don’t believe your lying eyes: My book is not out of print, just out of stock; Amazon just sold all the copies it had in its warehouses, and now you can only get it from third-party booksellers if you choose to buy it from Amazon.com.

That my book has exceeded expectations in terms of sales and is currently out of stock is a nice problem for me to have, but what can you do if you would like to purchase your own copy? Here are two options:

  1. You can backorder a copy from Bookshop. I have been using Amazon for so long that this needed to be explained to me, and maybe it needs to be explained to you, too. The way my editor explained it is as follows: “A backorder means that you’ll be placing an order that will be filled as soon as stock arrives … with Bookshop, a customer can place the order now and it will be fulfilled once books are back in stock.” The link to get the book through Bookshop is here.
  2. If you are in the US, you can backorder a copy from Penguin Random House and get a $5 discount. The MIT Press marketing folks have created a discount code that can get you a $5 discount on the price of the book (so instead of paying $25, you pay $20) for people with US mailing addresses. The link to order from Penguin Random House is here; use “DoingEcon” (no quotation marks) as discount code (there is a limit of one discount per order). In this case, too, your copy will ship once inventories are replenished.