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Markets, money and capital : Hicksian economics for the twenty-first century / edited by Roberto Scazzieri, Amartya K. Sen and Stefano Zamagni.

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublisher: Cambridge, UK ; New York : Cambridge University Press, 2008Description: xiii, 451 pages : illustrations ; 24 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 0521873215
  • 9780521873215
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 330.092 22
LOC classification:
  • HB103.H47 M37 2008
Online resources:
Contents:
Between theory and history : on the identity of Hicks's economics / Roberto Scazzieri and Stefano Zamagni -- Pt. I. The intellectual heritage of John Hicks. Hicks on liberty / Amartya Sen -- An economist even greater than his high reputation / Paul A. Samuelson -- Hicks's 'conversion' - from J.R. to John / Luigi L. Pasinetti and Ganpaolo Mariutti -- Dear John, dear Ursula (Cambridge and LSE, 1935) : 88 letters unearthed / Maria Cristina Marcuzzo and Eleonora Sanfilippo -- Hicks and his publishers / Andrew Schuller -- Hicks in reviews, 1932-89 : from The theory of wages to A market theory of money / Warren Young -- Pt. II. Markets. Hicks and the emptiness of general equilibrium theory / Christopher Bliss -- Hicks versus Marx? On the theory of economic history / Pierluigi Ciocca -- Hicks's notion and use of fix-price and flex-price / Marcello De Cecco -- On the Hicksian definition of income in applied economic analysis / Paolo Onofri and Anna Stagni -- Pt. III. Money. Historical stylizations and monetary theory / Alberto Quadrio Curzio and Roberto Scazzieri -- Hicks : money, prices and credit management / Omar Hamouda -- Core, mantle and industry : a monetary perspective of banks' capital standards / Rainer Masera -- A suggestion for simplifying the theory of asset prices / Riccardo Cesari and Carlo D'Adda -- Pt. IV. Capital and dynamics. 'Distribution and economic progress' after 70 years / Robert M. Solow -- Flexible saving and economic growth / Mauro Baranzini -- The economics of nonlinear cycles / Piero Ferri -- A perspective on a Hicksian non-linear theory of the trade cycle / Kumaraswamy Vela Velupillai -- Capital, growth, and production disequilibria : on the employment consequences of new technologies / Harald Hagemann -- Capital and time / Erich Streissler -- Sequential analysis and out-of-equilibrium paths / Mario Amendola and Jean-Luc Gaffard.
Summary: "Sir John Hicks (1904-1989) was a leading economic theorist of the twentieth century, and along with Kenneth Arrow was awarded the Nobel Prize in 1972. His work addressed central topics in economic theory, such as value, money, capital and growth. An important unifying theme was the attention for economic rationality 'in time' and his acknowledgement that apparent rigidities and frictions might exert a positive role as a buffer against excessive fluctuations in output, prices and employment. This emphasis on the virtue of imperfection significantly distances Hicksian economics from both the Keynesian and Monetarist approaches. Containing contributions from distinguished theorists in their own right (including three Nobel Prize winners), this volume examines Hicks's intellectual heritage and discusses how his ideas suggest a distinct approach to economic theory and policy making. It will be of great interest to scholars and students of economic theory and the history of economic thought."--Publisher description.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Book City Campus City Campus Main Collection 330.092 HIC (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available A378438B

Includes bibliographical references (pages 405-432) and index.

Between theory and history : on the identity of Hicks's economics / Roberto Scazzieri and Stefano Zamagni -- Pt. I. The intellectual heritage of John Hicks. Hicks on liberty / Amartya Sen -- An economist even greater than his high reputation / Paul A. Samuelson -- Hicks's 'conversion' - from J.R. to John / Luigi L. Pasinetti and Ganpaolo Mariutti -- Dear John, dear Ursula (Cambridge and LSE, 1935) : 88 letters unearthed / Maria Cristina Marcuzzo and Eleonora Sanfilippo -- Hicks and his publishers / Andrew Schuller -- Hicks in reviews, 1932-89 : from The theory of wages to A market theory of money / Warren Young -- Pt. II. Markets. Hicks and the emptiness of general equilibrium theory / Christopher Bliss -- Hicks versus Marx? On the theory of economic history / Pierluigi Ciocca -- Hicks's notion and use of fix-price and flex-price / Marcello De Cecco -- On the Hicksian definition of income in applied economic analysis / Paolo Onofri and Anna Stagni -- Pt. III. Money. Historical stylizations and monetary theory / Alberto Quadrio Curzio and Roberto Scazzieri -- Hicks : money, prices and credit management / Omar Hamouda -- Core, mantle and industry : a monetary perspective of banks' capital standards / Rainer Masera -- A suggestion for simplifying the theory of asset prices / Riccardo Cesari and Carlo D'Adda -- Pt. IV. Capital and dynamics. 'Distribution and economic progress' after 70 years / Robert M. Solow -- Flexible saving and economic growth / Mauro Baranzini -- The economics of nonlinear cycles / Piero Ferri -- A perspective on a Hicksian non-linear theory of the trade cycle / Kumaraswamy Vela Velupillai -- Capital, growth, and production disequilibria : on the employment consequences of new technologies / Harald Hagemann -- Capital and time / Erich Streissler -- Sequential analysis and out-of-equilibrium paths / Mario Amendola and Jean-Luc Gaffard.

"Sir John Hicks (1904-1989) was a leading economic theorist of the twentieth century, and along with Kenneth Arrow was awarded the Nobel Prize in 1972. His work addressed central topics in economic theory, such as value, money, capital and growth. An important unifying theme was the attention for economic rationality 'in time' and his acknowledgement that apparent rigidities and frictions might exert a positive role as a buffer against excessive fluctuations in output, prices and employment. This emphasis on the virtue of imperfection significantly distances Hicksian economics from both the Keynesian and Monetarist approaches. Containing contributions from distinguished theorists in their own right (including three Nobel Prize winners), this volume examines Hicks's intellectual heritage and discusses how his ideas suggest a distinct approach to economic theory and policy making. It will be of great interest to scholars and students of economic theory and the history of economic thought."--Publisher description.

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