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9 - Hicks's notion and use of the concepts of fix-price and flex-price

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 June 2009

Roberto Scazzieri
Affiliation:
Università degli Studi, Bologna, Italy
Amartya Sen
Affiliation:
Harvard University, Massachusetts
Stefano Zamagni
Affiliation:
Università degli Studi, Bologna, Italy
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Summary

The coexistence of fix-price and flex-price markets

It is generally accepted that John Hicks attached great importance to the distinction between fix-price markets and flex-price markets. He was by no means the first to notice the existence of these two types of markets, but he was more insistent than most economists in stressing the frequent coexistence of both markets and in trying to model it. More than that, he maintained that flex-price markets needed fix-price ones to survive in the long run. While leaving the theoretical aspects of this issue to people more conversant than I am with theoretical economics, I intend in this chapter to go over Hicks's own use of this notion in the space he dedicated, in his published work, to the analysis of real-life economies, and of economic history.

Fix-price, flex-price, and sticky wages

Hicks noticed the coexistence of the two types of markets in the first important work he produced, his 1932 book The Theory of Wages. Labor markets – he notes there – did not behave in many cases like Marshallian markets. Money wages were sticky, relativities mattered, and – at least in a highly unionized labor market such as the British one, where the union movement was fragmented, by historical reasons, according to the many trades coexisting under the same factory roof and thus given to frequent demarcation disputes – wage-fixing was based mainly on the perception of the need by each trade to maintain a fixed place between adjoining trades.

Type
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Markets, Money and Capital
Hicksian Economics for the Twenty First Century
, pp. 157 - 163
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2009

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