Journal of International Economics

Papers
(The H4-Index of Journal of International Economics is 31. The table below lists those papers that are above that threshold based on CrossRef citation counts [max. 250 papers]. The publications cover those that have been published in the past four years, i.e., from 2021-11-01 to 2025-11-01.)
ArticleCitations
Banking regulation with risk of sovereign default180
The foreign firm wage premium in the Israeli tech sector169
Financial spillovers of foreign direct investment: Evidence from China122
Within firm supply chains: Evidence from India122
International input–output linkages and changing business cycle volatility77
Small firms and domestic bank dependence in Europe's great recession75
Trade competition and migration: Evidence from the quartz crisis58
Central bank information effects and transatlantic spillovers53
Supply chain risk: Changes in supplier composition and vertical integration50
Financial crises and the global supply network: Evidence from multinational enterprises50
Introduction: NBER International Seminar on Macroeconomics50
Output divergence in fixed exchange rate regimes49
Lobbying, trade, and misallocation49
Public debt and household inflation expectations49
The interplay between oil and food commodity prices: Has it changed over time?48
Internal migration, remittances and economic development48
Capital flows at risk: Taming the ebbs and flows47
Did trade liberalization with China influence US elections?44
Macroprudential policy with leakages42
Bilateral international investments: The big sur?42
Underinvestment and capital misallocation under sovereign risk41
The aggregate effects of global and local supply chain disruptions: 2020–202241
A rising tide? The local incidence of the second wave of globalization41
Sudden stops and optimal foreign exchange intervention41
Currency volatility and global technological innovation39
The economic costs of trade sanctions: Evidence from North Korea38
Dollar invoicing, global value chains, and the business cycle dynamics of international trade37
Consumption, exchange rate, and external adjustment during a crisis36
Bound by ancestors: Immigration, credit frictions, and global supply chain formation36
Forecasting the U.S. Dollar in the 21st Century33
On the evolution of comparative advantage: Path-dependent versus path-defying changes32
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