The Economics Job Market Rumors (EJMR) website began as a forum for PhD students to discuss the economics job market, but it has long since become notorious for misogyny, racism, and other toxic behaviour (see this post, for example), due in large part to the anonymous nature of the platform. And even though the user community at EJMR has been called out for their behaviour, it doesn't seem to have gotten much better over time. This is documented by this 2025 article by Florian Ederer (Boston University), Paul Goldsmith-Pinkham, and Kyle Jensen (both Yale University), published in the journal AEA Papers and Proceedings (ungated earlier version here).
Ederer et al. analyse content from EJMR over the period from January 2012 to May 2023, documenting a number of changes. First:
...starting in 2018, EJMR saw an explosion in discussions initiated by references to Twitter posts. This shift mirrors Twitter’s growing importance as a real-time source of information and debate in academic and public policy circles.
Twitter (now X) essentially took over from YouTube as being the source of initial references on EJMR from about 2018, which is about the time of the earlier research on toxicity and misogyny on the platform. There were also surprising declines in Marginal Revolution and NBER links as the starting point for EJMR discussions. Given the predominance of Twitter as a source, Ederer et al. then look in more detail at which Twitter accounts were most referenced, reporting that:
These accounts can be broadly categorized into three main groups: economists, right-wing commentators, and journalists. The group of economists (e.g., Claudia_Sahm, jenniferdoleac, and JustinWolfers) includes academic and professional economists from diverse institutions whose tweets often serve as springboards for debates on research findings, policy implications, and professional conduct. The second group includes polarizing and predominantly conservative commentators and agitators (e.g., realChrisBrunet, RichardHanania, and libsoftiktok) and reflects EJMR’s right-wing slant and engagement with contentious political and social issues. The third group is a collection of news sources and journalistic accounts, many of which have a conservative slant (e.g., visegrad24, disclosetv, and nypost).
Finally, Ederer et al. characterise the posts linking to each Twitter account in terms of 'hate speech', 'negativity', 'misogyny', and 'toxicity' (based on measures from their companion paper here), finding that:
Among the 10 most frequently mentioned Twitter accounts, there are four economists, including three female economists. EJMR posts referencing two of these female economists (Claudia_Sahm and jenniferdoleac) have very high average z-scores of 1.974 and 2.598 for the Misogynistic classifier, indicating that EJMR posters discuss them in strongly misogynistic terms compared to all other Twitter accounts mentioned on EJMR... The only other large average z-score for the Misogynistic measure is for EJMR posts referencing elben (z-score Misogynistic = 0.956), an academic economist who has championed LGBTQ-inclusive policies in the economics profession.
In other words, since 2018 EJMR has remained a hostile and misogynistic platform, with its toxicity increasingly fed by same antagonism and culture-war discourse on Twitter/X. EJMR is not just an academic forum, but has become part of that broader hostile ecosystem.
Economists need places where they can share research in progress, ideas, and practical advice, especially early in their careers. In its early days, EJMR served that purpose. However, it has long since become a space that early career economists are better off avoiding.
[HT: Marginal Revolution, in January last year]
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