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General Tips

  1. It helps to read other people's prose. Reading back and forth between good and bad writing makes obvious the deficiencies in one's own prose.
  2. Don't be skimpy on motivation. I've seen an argument that it's best to limit your motivation to the first paragraph and jump straight into what your paper does. Unless your contribution is obvious and your research question inherently fascinating, I personally think a lot of thought and multiple paragraphs should go into properly motivating the paper.

Examples in Empirical Economics

  1. Amir Sufi, Chicago Booth
  2. Matthew Gentzkow, Stanford
  3. Marcella Alsan, Harvard
  4. Christian Leuz, Chicago Booth
  5. Jeremy Stein, Harvard
  6. Owen Lamont, Industry
  7. John Campbell, Harvard

Examples in Theoretical Economics

  1. Jeremy Stein, Harvard
  2. Steven T. Berry, Yale
  3. Paul Krugman, retired
  4. John Campbell, Harvard