Referee Report
Pretend that you are a peer reviewer for a top general-interest journal, say the American Economic Review. Your job is to advise the editor on whether or not to accept the paper. I expect reports with no less than 3 pages and no more than 4 pages. You will also have to give a 10 min presentation (5-6 slides) summarizing the paper.

A good referee report takes the following format:
1) An introduction that provides a very short overview of the main thrust of the paper (1 paragraph).
2) A summary of the paper, focusing on the main points of the paper and the points that will be important to your critique. A summary that is typically one paragraph and contains a brief statement of the question addressed by the author, an outline of how the author answers the question at hand, and a brief synopsis of the results. (2-3 paragraphs)
3) Referees outline both the strengths and weaknesses of the methodology used by the authors. Many referees make the mistake of only noting what they do not like about the paper. Spend some time discussing what you like and found innovative as well. (3-4 paragraphs)
4) Finally, most referees make some suggestions about how to improve the paper. This can include such details as catching typos, to suggestions about how to motivate or structure the paper, and most importantly, other models or estimation results that can be run that help bolster the hypothesis the author is testing. (2-3 paragraphs)
5) A concluding section (1-2 paragraphs)

The answers required for a good referee report of experimental economics papers:
1. What is the purpose of this paper?
2. Does the paper accomplish what it set out to do?
3. Is the purpose best served by the design? Is there any confound of the design?
4. Is there a relevant and important literature that the author does not cite and/or use when it should be cited and/or used?
5. If the paper contains theory (explicit or implicit), does it hold up upon closer scrutiny? Is there an alternative theory that is better suited that the author has ignored?
6. Are the hypotheses best tested by the statistics tests the authors used? Do the tests or regressions well address possible issues like: the censored data, session fixed effect, individual dependence, and highly correlated dependent variables?
7. Are the tables and figures self-contained and easy to comprehend, and could you, if needed, replicate them?
8. Is this paper well structured?
9. Are the conclusions overstated?

Referee Report
Pretend that you are a peer reviewer for a top general-interest journal, say the American Economic Review. Your job is to advise the editor on whether or not to accept the paper. I expect reports with no less than 3 pages and no more than 4 pages. You will also have to give a 10 min presentation (5-6 slides) summarizing the paper.

A good referee report takes the following format:
1) An introduction that provides a very short overview of the main thrust of the paper (1 paragraph).
2) A summary of the paper, focusing on the main points of the paper and the points that will be important to your critique. A summary that is typically one paragraph and contains a brief statement of the question addressed by the author, an outline of how the author answers the question at hand, and a brief synopsis of the results. (2-3 paragraphs)
3) Referees outline both the strengths and weaknesses of the methodology used by the authors. Many referees make the mistake of only noting what they do not like about the paper. Spend some time discussing what you like and found innovative as well. (3-4 paragraphs)
4) Finally, most referees make some suggestions about how to improve the paper. This can include such details as catching typos, to suggestions about how to motivate or structure the paper, and most importantly, other models or estimation results that can be run that help bolster the hypothesis the author is testing. (2-3 paragraphs)
5) A concluding section (1-2 paragraphs)

The answers required for a good referee report of experimental economics papers:
1. What is the purpose of this paper?
2. Does the paper accomplish what it set out to do?
3. Is the purpose best served by the design? Is there any confound of the design?
4. Is there a relevant and important literature that the author does not cite and/or use when it should be cited and/or used?
5. If the paper contains theory (explicit or implicit), does it hold up upon closer scrutiny? Is there an alternative theory that is better suited that the author has ignored?
6. Are the hypotheses best tested by the statistics tests the authors used? Do the tests or regressions well address possible issues like: the censored data, session fixed effect, individual dependence, and highly correlated dependent variables?
7. Are the tables and figures self-contained and easy to comprehend, and could you, if needed, replicate them?
8. Is this paper well structured?
9. Are the conclusions overstated?

Please answer this question, One paragraph for each question.
(The PDF file I attached is optional read, so if you can answer this question with screenshot that I attached, you do not need to read PDF file)

Questions

1. What are phases of world economic activity since World War Two?

2. What was the GATT?

3. How did West Germany and Japan catch up?

4. How did the crisis of the 70s occur?

Week 1 Case Study: Dr. Fauci and COVID-19
Review the following material and submit your weekly case study by October 23, 2020
Article Selections/Choices found in the Wall Street Journal:
https://search-proquest-com.ezproxy.umo.edu/docview/2390464231/316FD9DDE7844CDPQ/3?accountid=12610
https://search-proquest-com.ezproxy.umo.edu/docview/2376532606/F49892000AE14C31PQ/6?accountid=12610
Week 1 Videos:
WAT IS A CORONAVISRUS? Elizabeth Cox (youtube: https://youtu.be/D9tTi-CDjdu
Decoding COVID-19/NOVA/PBS : Decoding COVID-19 (YOUTUBE:  https://youtu.be/dz5WE3hgvBY)
Biography – Dr. Anthony Fauci
https://www.biography.com/scientist/anthony-fauci
Add what you found on the Wall Street
—————————————————————————-
Weekly Case Studies are required to have the following:
Title Page
Abstract
Body of Paper Will Consist of the following sections:
1.    Introduction
2.    Leader Profile
3.    Situation
4.    Questions (Problem Subsection, Evaluation Subsection, and Hypothesis Subsection)
5.    Proof and Action
6.    Alternatives
7.    Conclusion
8.    Personal Reflection
References Page (with references in APA format)
Papers will have at least one APA formatted citation in the body of the paper

Write a two-page, single-spaced essay on the following questions, based on the lectures and readings only:

Describe the preponderant power of the US after World War 2 and the strategy of liberal hegemony which US planners devised. What were the major economic initiatives of the US in the postwar period (Bretton Woods, Marshall Plan, GATT), and how did these initiatives accord with the strategy of liberal hegemony? How did West Germany and Japan catch up to the US in terms of world economic power, and how did the ‘Golden Age’ of the postwar ‘Boom’ turn into crisis and ‘Bust’ in the 1960s and 1970s?

Write full sentences and paragraphs. Do NOT DO ANY RESEARCH BEYOND THE LECTURES AND COURSE READINGS. Provide in-text references in parentheses if necessary (e.g. Brenner, p. 45). Show me that you understand the course readings and lectures and can synthesize a concise short essay.

Read – https://www.nytimes.com/2020/05/29/opinion/sunday/united-states-cold-war.html

Locate a source that would be relevant to a research topic of your choice that interests you.
Cite the source that you located.
State the topic you researched and the database you used to locate the source.
Describe your research process. In other words, how did you conduct your search, what keywords did you use, and so on?
Imagine you are now writing a memo and a FAQ that would include information from the source that you located.
Briefly explain how you would incorporate the source into the memo and the FAQ.
How your use of the source is different based on the type of writing you are doing?
Briefly explain what your writing process for one of these two would be (either the memo or the FAQ).