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In: The Economic Journal, Band 39, Heft 155, S. 420
In: Applied economic perspectives and policy, Band 45, Heft 3, S. 1258-1274
ISSN: 2040-5804
AbstractReplicability is a cornerstone of all scientific disciplines. While agricultural economists often provide recommendations to stakeholders that inform, among others policymaking, we currently lack replication papers published in leading agricultural economics journals. This increases the risk that published results are not replicable, which potentially can lead to inefficient resource allocation. In this article, we provide a framework for replications in agricultural economics and discuss challenges and opportunities with the objective to foster a replication culture. We provide pathways on how to untap this potential and provide guidance for enabling a stronger emphasis on replications in the field of agricultural economics. We present the first special issue on replications in agricultural economics, which consists of 11 articles that replicate various empirical analyses presented in published articles and advance the analyses that were used in the original work to provide further insights.
In: Advances in agricultural economic history volume 2
Issues surrounding agriculture have always had pride of place among academic research in economic history. Interest in agricultural issues does not seem to come into fashion, and then fade into the background only to return years later. Indeed, agriculture was so vital to the workings of historical economies that a steady stream of important scholarship continues to be produced. Beyond its importance of being a record of the past, it is clear that much of the research in this area has important policy implications for both developed and developing economies. This type of work highlights an important facet of doing such historical research: learning from the past so as to understand better the world today. Several articles contained in volume two of Advances in Agricultural Economic History either implicitly or explicitly have lessons or policy implications for today. Volume 2 of Advances in Agricultural Economic History, like volume 1, contains important new work by both established and young academics. Additionally, this recent volume reflects, both geographically and methodologically, the broad scope of cutting edge work being done in this area. It is this type of scholarship that we seek to publish in future issues. We invite scholars who work in all areas of agricultural economic history to submit their work for publication in future volumes of Advances in Agricultural Economic History
In: Applied economic perspectives and policy, Band 45, Heft 4, S. 2094-2105
ISSN: 2040-5804
AbstractAgricultural and other fields of economics have always co‐evolved and benefitted from each other's insights. Over time, a general convergence of all social sciences began, and various fields of psychology, sociology, anthropology, and political science started to overlap with general and agricultural economics. Within economics, it was especially the rise of behavioral economics, that has steered the field toward the other social sciences. It departs from the assumption of perfectly rational expected utility maximizers and allows for greater diversity in decision‐makers' objectives and constraints. Agricultural economics has been early to recognize the need to make economic choice models more realistic. This can be explained by the particularities of agricultural economics and agriculture. Agricultural economists are tasked with solving specific, practical problems, and thus behavioral deviations from model predictions have always been salient and relevant to policy recommendations. Then, farmers—and to some extent also consumers—make choices in particularly complex and uncertain environments and must use all strategic tools at their disposal to deal with their "bounded rationality". These include the reliance on culture and other heuristics. Agricultural economics continues to synergize economic theory and practice with insights from other disciplines and real‐world experiences and is an important driver towards further unification of all social sciences.
In: Current Issues in Economics
List of Tables -- List of Figures -- Series Editor's Preface -- Notes on the Contributors -- Current Issues in Agricultural Economics: Introduction and Overview; A.J.Rayner & D.Colman -- The Political Economy of Industrial Countries' Agricultural Policies; L.A.Winters -- Agricultural Policy Reform in the US and the EC; T.Josling -- Agricultural Trade and the Gatt; A.J.Rayner, K.A.Ingersent & R.C.Hine -- Transformation of Agriculture in Central Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union: Major Policy Issues and Perspectives; C.Cz ki -- The Quest for Sustained Growth in Chinese Agriculture; T.Sicular -- Macroeconomics and the Agricultural Sector; P.Midmore & D.A.Peel -- Economics of Agricultural Research and Biotechnology; W.Lesser & D.Lee -- Environmental Economics and Agricultural Policy; D.Colman -- Less Favoured Areas and Rural Decline; K.J.Thompson -- Notes and References -- Bibliography -- Author Index -- Subject Index.