ABSTRACT
Baumol, William J., “John versus the Hicksians; or, Theorist Malgré Lui”, Journal of Economic Literature, 28/4 (1990): 1708-15
Hicks, John R., Capital and Growth, Oxford: Clarendon Press, and New York: Oxford University Press, 1965
Hicks, John R., Critical Essays in Monetary Theory, Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1967
Hicks, John R., A Theory of Economic History, Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1969
Hicks, John R., Capital and Time: A Neo-Austrian Theory, Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1973
Hicks, John R., The Crisis in Keynesian Economics, Oxford: Blackwell, 1974
Hicks, John R., Causality in Economics, Oxford: Blackwell, and New York: Basic Books, 1979
Hicks, John R., Methods of Dynamic Economics, Oxford: Clarendon Press, and New York: Oxford University Press, 1985
Hicks, John R., A Market Theory of Money, Oxford: Clarendon Press, and New York: Oxford University Press, 1989
Hicks, John R., “The Unification of Macroeconomics”, Economic Journal, 100/40 (1990): 528-38
Laidler, David, “Hicks’s Later Monetary Thought” in The Legacy of Hicks: His Contribution to Economic Analysis, edited by Harald Hagemann and O. F. Hamouda, London and New York: Routledge, 1994
Samuels, Warren J., “John R. Hicks and the History of Economics”, History of Political Economy, 25/2 (1993): 351-74
J.R. Hicks is well known mainly for his contributions to general equilibrium, welfare economics, and monetary theory, which constitute the basis of modern economic analysis. His later contributions on dynamic economics, to which Hicks himself attributed great importance, are less well known. They should be read further, though, as they represent interesting steps forward, and a key for a deeper and more coherent understanding of the whole of his thought.