ECONOMIC INQUIRY | No Revisions Policy


My predecessor, Preston McAfee, introduced a “no revisions” option in response to growing publication lags.  This option has been quite successful and will be retained.  Indeed, other journals (e.g., Journal of Labor Research) have adopted it.  As he wrote:

Journal time to publication lags has become embarrassing. Many authors have 5 year submission-to-print stories. More insidious, in my view, is the gradual morphing of the referees from evaluators to anonymous co-authors. Referees request increasingly extensive revisions. Usually these represent improvements, but the process takes a lot of time and effort, and the end result is often worse owing to its committee-design. Authors, knowing referees will make them rewrite the paper, are sometimes sloppy with the submission. This feedback loop - submitting a sloppy paper since referees will require rewriting combined with a need to fix all the sloppiness - has led to our current misery. Moreover, the expectation that referees will rewrite papers, combined with sloppy submissions, makes refereeing extraordinarily unpleasant. We - the efficiency-obsessed academic discipline - have the least efficient publication process.  The system is broken.

Under this policy, an author can submit under a 'no revisions' policy. This policy means exactly what it says: if you submit under no revisions, I (or the co-editor) will either accept or reject. What will not happen is a request for a revision.

The editors and co-editors will ask referees: 'is it better for Economic Inquiry to publish the paper as is, versus reject it, and why or why not?' This policy returns referees to their role of evaluator. There will still be anonymous reports.  Authors who receive an acceptance would have the option of publishing without changes. If a referee noticed a minor problem and put it in the report, self-respecting authors would fix the problem. But such fixes would not be a condition of publication.

An author may opt for submission under the old system. The old system remains the default; to opt in to the new system, please select 'no revisions' on the submission website and also state this in the cover letter.

Tim Salmon, EI Editor