Abstract

Economic research is vital for creating more suitable policies to facilitate economic growth. Employing a combination of descriptive and Bayesian analyses, this paper investigates the research landscape of the economics discipline in Vietnam, in particular, the leading affiliations in the field and how these institutions compare to each other in terms of productivity, the number of lead authors, new authors and publications' journal impact factor. We also examine the differences in the authors' productivity based on their age and gender. The dataset extracted from the SSHPA database includes 1,444 articles. The findings show that among top producers of economic research in Vietnam, seven are universities, leaving only one representative of research institutes. These top producers account for 52% of research output among 178 institutes recorded in the database. We also find a correlation between a researcher's affiliation, sex, and scientific productivity in Vietnam's economic discipline. Overall, publications by male researchers outnumber those by female ones in most of the top affiliations. The findings also indicate that 40–44 is the age group with the highest scientific productivity. Researchers' collaboration, which is observed through co-authorship, is on the rise in all of the top eight economic research affiliations. However, the quality of current Vietnam's scientific works in the discipline is questionable. Therefore, it is suggested that in order to sustain scientific productivity, economic researchers might need to balance the quantity and quality of their contributions.

Highlights

  • Economic research is vital for creating more suitable policies to facilitate economic growth

  • Results from Bayesian analysis shed some light on the relationship between sex and Vietnamese economic researchers' scientific productivity

  • The results show that the significant number of articles from the top eight affiliations has Journal Impact Factor (JIF) 1⁄4 0, only belongs to Scopus or Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)

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Summary

Introduction

Economic research is vital for creating more suitable policies to facilitate economic growth. The findings show that among top producers of economic research in Vietnam, seven are universities, leaving only one representative of research institutes. These top producers account for 52% of research output among 178 institutes recorded in the database. We find a correlation between a researcher's affiliation, sex, and scientific productivity in Vietnam's economic discipline. Parallel with the country's economic advancement is the significant development of economic researchers in the Vietnamese social sciences community. Within the 2011–2017 period, around 384 Social Sciences and Humanities (SSH) projects were funded by the Vietnam National Foundation for Science and Technology Development (NAFOSTED). Around 24% of the projects belonged to the Economics discipline (95/384) (Nafosted, 2018)

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