Editorial: 30 Years Journal of Population Economics
J Popul Econ (2017) 30:1–5
DOI 10.1007/s00148-016-0621-0
EDITORIAL
Editorial: 30 Years Journal of Population Economics
Klaus F. Zimmermann 1,2
Published online: 8 October 2016
# Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2016
Issue 1/2017 marks an important landmark for the Journal of Population Economics.
The Journal enters its 30th year of successful academic service. We celebrate three
decades of dedication in publishing outstanding theoretical and insightful applied
research in all areas of population economics. Nobel Laureates, renowned scientists
in the field, established researchers and junior up-and-coming researchers have been
contributing to the Journal. In 1987, when the first articles were evaluated for the
inaugural issue that came out in 1988, population economics was a rather peripheral
field in economics without a dedicated platform for studying, discussing, and publishing such research. However, there was a rising interest in the area inspired by the path
breaking contributions of Jakob Mincer, Gary Becker, Richard Easterlin, Marc Nerlove
and Robert Fogel, among others.
These leading and influential scientists were all working at US universities. Europeans were still trying to catch up in this area, let alone having the Journal dedicated to
population economics. The demographic associations based in Europe at the time were
not interested in absorbing the contributions by economists, in particular because
demographers and sociologists were still apprehensive of the “imperialism” of economists and their rigorous mathematical treatment of the subject. So some of us took the
initiative in Europe to create a new and much needed scientific association, the
European Society for Population Economics in 1986. The Journal of Population
Economics became the independent partner of the Society. It was not accidental that I
took, at the time, the role of the Secretary of the Society as well as the Managing Editor
of the Journal. Germany and its researchers with the foreseeable long-term demographic challenges was a natural core of the European-based initiative.
Soon after the Journal took off, high international demand made it de facto global. It
became a decisive instrument to establish and promote the field of population economics in all parts of the world. While, nowadays, there is a mushrooming number of
* Klaus F. Zimmermann
1
UNU-MERIT, Maastricht, The Netherlands
2
Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, USA
2
K.F. Zimmermann
competing journals dealing with issues of economic demography, the international and
independent Journal of Population Economics has strongly established itself as the
leading outlet in the field of population economics. By the 1990s, the field has risen to
prominence, with Gary Becker (1992) and Robert Fogel (1993) receiving the Nobel
Prize in Economics for their seminal work in areas of population economics. Throughout the decades, the Journal of Population Economics has been at the forefront of
population economics research. The quotes below by leading scientists from economics, history, sociology, political science and demography witness this.
Since the beginning, the Journal of Population Economics has been published in
cooperation with the Society and with Springer-Verlag as the publisher. Over the
decades, the Journal was also supported by the institutions I was affiliated with
including the University of Pennsylvania, the University of Mannheim, the Seminar
for Labor and Population Economics of Munich University, the Institute for the Study
of Labor, the Center for European Studies at Harvard University and the Industrial
Relations Section of Princeton University. Since 2016, the Journal is hosted by POP –
Centre for Population, Development and Labor Economics at the United Nations
University – Maastricht Economic and Social Research Institute on Innovation and
Technology (UNU-MERIT).
The Journal of Population Economics owes its success to the devoted engagement
of the many Editors, Associate Editors, Managing Editors and Editorial Assistants. We
are grateful to the unknown heroes, the referees, for the thousands of referee reports
they have written to critically and constructively evaluate the submissions. And we are
proud of the ever rising number of excellent authors who submit their best work and
entrust us to judge their high caliber research. The research community keeps a loyal
relationship to the articles in the Journal. And last but not least, we thank the host
institutions and Springer-Verlag for all the support we have received over the 30 years.
We are looking forward to further success stories.
Klaus F. Zimmermann, Editor-in-Chief, Journal of Population Economics
Some views on the Journal of Population Economics.
“I read each issue”
I congratulate the Journal of Population Economics on the advent of its 30th year of
publication. Its founder and chief editor-Klaus Zimmermann - and his editorial boards
- have done an outstanding job in creating a high quality forum for research on the
economics of the household, migration, fertility, education and health. I read each issue
with interest and have learned much from it over the years. I wish it continued success.
James J. Heckman, Henry Schultz Distinguished Service Professor of Economics at the University of Chicago, Nobel Prize Winner in Economics
“will become more important than ever”
The core of every economy is its population and a dedicated journal was long
overdue when the Journal of Population Economics was launched. With our stagnant
populations, ageing and immigration the topics on which it focuses will become more
Editorial: 30 Years Journal of Population Economics
3
important than ever. As it turns 30 it promises to occupy an ever-important place in the
profession and we should all be thankful for its existence.
Sir Christopher Pissarides, Regius Professor of Economics at the London
School of Economics, Nobel Prize Winner in Economics
"one of the most important journals of economics"
The Journal of Population Economics straddles an important space between demography and formal economics that, while always important, had been neglected
before the journal came into existence. In the thirty years since its inception the journal
has seen a most remarkable climb to prominence. It witnessed a steady rise in impact
factor over the last decade and has established itself as one of the most important
journals of economics.
Kaushik Basu, Chief Economist and Senior Vice President at the World Bank,
Professor of Economics and C. Marks Professor at Cornell University.
“a must read”
The Journal of Population Economics had become the go to place for research at
the intersection of economics and demography. In a world where issues such as aging
populations and migration demand policy responses, the journal has become a must
read.
Janet Currie, Henry Putnam Professor of Economics and Public Affairs and
Director of the Center for Health and Well-Being at Princeton Universit (...truncated)