Viner was a noted opponent of John Maynard Keynes during the Great Depression. While he agreed with the policies of government spending pushed by Keynes, Viner argued that Keynes's analysis was flawed and would not stand in the long run.
Viner is further known for having added the terms trade creation and trade diversion to the canon of economics in 1950. He also made important contributions to the theory of international trade and to the history of economic thought. While he was at Chicago, Viner co-edited the Journal of Political Economy with Frank Knight.
His work, Studies in the Theory of International Trade (1937), discusses the history of economic thought and is a historical source for the Bullionist controversy in 19th-century Britain.
Atomic bomb
Viner spoke at the Conference on Atomic Energy Control in 1945, stating "that the atomic bomb was the cheapest way yet devised of killing human beings" and that atomic bombs "will be peacemaking in effect," perhaps making him the founder of nuclear deterrence.[19]
Major publications
"Some Problems of Logical Method in Political Economy", 1917, JPE
"Price Policies: the determination of market price", 1921.
Dumping: A problem in international trade, 1923.
Canada's Balance of International Indebtedness: 1900–1913, 1924.
"The Utility Concept in Value Theory and its Critics", 1925, JPE.
Frederick C. Mills; Jacob H. Hollander; Jacob Viner; E. B. Wilson; Wesley C. Mitchell; F. W. Taussig; T. S. Adams; John D. Black; John Candler Cobb (1928). "The Present Status and Future Prospects of Quantitative Economics". American Economic Review. 18 (1): 28–45. JSTOR1811547.
"Mills' Behavior of Prices", 1929, QJE
"Costs Curves and Supply Curves," Zeitschrift für Nationalökonomie, 3, pp. 23–46. Reprinted in R. B. Emmett, ed. 2002, The Chicago Tradition in Economics, 1892–1945, Routledge, v. 6, pp. 192–215.
"The Doctrine of Comparative Costs", 1932, WWA
"Inflation as a Possible Remedy for the Depression", 1933, Proceedings of Institute of Public Affairs, Univ. of Georgia
Studies in the Theory of International Trade. London: George Allen & Unwin. 1937. via Mises Institute
"The Short View and the Long in Economic Policy," American Economic Review, 30(1), Part 1 1940, pp. 1–15.
"Marshall's Economics, in Relation to the Man and to his Times", 1941, AER
Trade Relations Between Free-Market and Controlled Economies, 1943.
"International Relations between State-Controlled National Economies", 1944, AER.
"Prospects for Foreign Trade in the Post-War World", 1946, Manchester Statistical Society.
"Power Versus Plenty as Objectives of Foreign Policy in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries", 1948, World Politics
"Bentham and J.S. Mill: the Utilitarian Background", 1949, AER
The Customs Union Issue, 1950.
"A Modest Proposal for Some Stress on Scholarship in Graduate Training", 1950 (reprinted in 1991)
International Economics, 1951.
International Trade and Economic Development, 1952.
"Schumpeter's History of Economic Analysis," American Economic Review, 44(5), 1954, pp. 894–910.
"'Fashion' in Economic Thought", 1957, Report of 6th Conference of Princeton Graduate Alumni
"International Trade Theory and its Present-Day Relevance", 1955, Economics and Public Policy
The Long View and the Short: Studies in Economic Theory, 1958.
"Stability and Progress: the poorer countries' problem", 1958, in Hague, editor, Stability and Progress in the World Economy
Five Lectures on Economics and Freedom, 1959 (Wabash Lectures, publ. 1991)
"The Intellectual History of Laissez-Faire", 1960, J Law Econ
"Hayek on Freedom and Coercion", 1960, Southern Econ J
"Relative Abundance of the Factors and International Trade", 1962, Indian EJ
"The Necessary and Desirable Range of Discretion to be Allowed to a Monetary Authority", 1962, in Yeager, editor, In Search of a Monetary Constitution
"'Possessive Individualism' as Original Sin", 1963, Canadian J of Econ & Poli Sci[1]
"The Earlier Letters of John Stuart Mill", 1963, Univ of Toronto Quarterly
"The Economist in History", 1963, American Economic Review, 53(2), pp. 1–22
"The United States as a Welfare State", 1963, in Higgenbotham, editor, Man, Science, Learning and Education
Problems of Monetary Control, 1964.
"Comment on my 1936 Review of Keynes", 1964, in Lekachman, editor, Keynes's General Theory
"Introduction", in J. Rae, Life of Adam Smith, 1965.
"Adam Smith", 1968, in Sills, editor, International Encyclopedia of Social Sciences
"Mercantilist Thought", 1968, in Sills, editor, International Encyclopedia of Social Sciences
"Man's Economic Status", 1968, in Clifford, editor, Man Versus Society in Eighteenth-Century Britain.
"Satire and Economics in the Augustan Age of Satire", 1970, in Miller et al., editors, The Augustan Milieu
The Role of Providence in the Social Order, 1972.
Religious Thought and Economic Society: Four Chapters of an Unfinished Work by Jacob Viner, ed. by J. Melitz and D. Winch, History of Poli Econ., 1978.
^Michael Wala (1994). The Council on Foreign Relations and American Foreign Policy in the Early Cold War. Berghahn Books. p. 38. The rapporteurs of the Economic and Financial Group
Bloomfield, Arthur I. (1992). "On the Centenary of Jacob Viner's Birth: A Retrospective View of the Man and His Work". Journal of Economic Literature. 30 (4): 2052–2085. JSTOR2727973.
Markwell, Donald (2008). John Maynard Keynes and International Relations: Economic Paths to War and Peace. Oxford University Press.