Ulteriori informazioni
Sommario
1: My John Hicks; 2: John and Ursula Hicks – A Personal Recollection; 3: Hicks, A World Economist; 4: “Mr. Keynes” and Hicks’s Value and Capital; 5: Hicks on Capital; 6: Hicks and Economic Theory; 7: Monetary Causes of the Business Cycles and Technological Change; 8: Capital and Growth; 9: Equilibrium, Expectations and Islm; 10: The Function of the Hicksian Economic Institution; 11: Hicks and the Crisis in Keynesian Economics; 12: A Note on Don Patinkin’s Misspecification of Keynes’ Consumption Function and Misinterpretation of Keynes’ Elasticity Analysis in Chapter 10 of the General Theory; 13: Money, Individual Choice and Frictions; 14: Patinkin, The General Theory, and Keynes’s Aggregate Supply Function; 15: Neoliberalism and Globalisation – Justifying Policies of Redistribution; 16: J.M. Keynes’s Bad Habit: A Critique of his Correspondence Style Based on the Hicks-Keynes Exchange Over the General Theory in 1936-37; 17: Sir John Hicks’s Contribution in the Field of Income Distribution, Profit Determination and Differentiated Behaviour of Economic Classes; 18: The Birth of Karl Popper’s Open Society: A Personal Reminiscence; 19: Mr. Hicks and the Classics; 20: “Neo Austrian Process(es)”; 21: Culture and Economic Growth; 22: Financing of Government Expenditure and the Efficacy of Is-Lm; 23: Hicks’ Approach to Economic Theory; 24: In Memoriam: John Hicks
Info autore
K. Puttaswamaiah
Riassunto
Economist Sir John Hicks was the first British economist to win the Nobel Prize in Economic Science (1972) for his wide ranging contributions in general and his book Value and Capital in particular