Regional-economics-Impact-factor

 Economic processes are complex structures and great attention is applied to the existence and effects of developments taking place in such processes. Regional economics is a context through which one may consider the spatial nature of an economic environment. A relatively young branch of economics is the regional economics. Its late start exemplifies the regrettable tendency of formal professional disciplines to lose contact with each other and to neglect certain important problem areas requiring a mix of approaches. Article impact factor offers a systematic assessment method for the ranking, review, selection, and contrast of related papers. It represents the total number of references to recent publications reported in scientific and social science journals in a given year or time, and is also used as a metric for a journal's relative significance within its area. It is first devised by the Institute for Scientific Information founder, Eugene Garfield. A journal's impact factor is assessed by dividing the number of current year citations into the source items that were published in that journal over the previous two years. Regional economics is a specialty area of student relevance a variety of courses to study. A conception of the spatial dimension of the economy is relevant to economists if they want to fully appreciate the economic mechanisms operate.  

High Impact List of Articles

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