Posted on 07/25/2002 5:38:08 AM PDT by Leto
Milton Friedman at 90
Milton Friedman's 90th birthday on July 31st provides an occasion to think back on his role as the pre-eminent economist of the 20th century. To those of us who were privileged to be his students, he also stands out as a great teacher.
When I was a graduate student at the University of Chicago, back in 1959, one day I was waiting outside Professor Friedman's office when another graduate student passed by. He noticed my exam paper on my lap and exclaimed: "You got a B?"
"Yes," I said. "Is that bad?"
"There were only two B's in the whole class," he replied.
"How many A's?" I asked.
"There were no A's!"
Today, this kind of grading might be considered to represent a "tough love" philosophy of teaching. I don't know about love, but it was certainly tough.
Professor Friedman also did not let students arrive late at his lectures and distract the class by their entrance. Once I arrived a couple of minutes late for class and had to turn around and go back to the dormitory.
All the way back, I thought about the fact that I would be held responsible for what was said in that lecture, even though I never heard it. Thereafter, I was always in my seat when Milton Friedman walked in to give his lecture.
On a term paper, I wrote that either (a) this would happen or (b) that would happen. Professor Friedman wrote in the margin: "Or (c) your analysis is wrong."
"Where was my analysis wrong?" I asked him.
"I didn't say your analysis was wrong," he replied. "I just wanted you to keep that possibility in mind."
Perhaps the best way to summarize all this is to say that Milton Friedman is a wonderful human being -- especially outside the classroom. It has been a much greater pleasure to listen to his lectures in later years, after I was no longer going to be quizzed on them, and a special pleasure to appear on a couple of television programs with him and to meet him on social occasions.
Milton Friedman's enduring legacy will long outlast the memories of his students and extends beyond the field of economics. John Maynard Keynes was the reigning demi-god among economists when Friedman's career began, and Friedman himself was at first a follower of Keynesian doctrines and liberal politics.
Yet no one did more to dismantle both Keynesian economics and liberal welfare-state thinking. As late as the 1950s, those with the prevailing Keynesian orthodoxy were still able to depict Milton Friedman as a fringe figure, clinging to an outmoded way of thinking. But the intellectual power of his ideas, the fortitude with which he persevered, and the ever more apparent failures of Keynesian analyses and policies, began to change all that, even before Professor Friedman was awarded the Nobel Prize in economics in 1976.
A towering intellect seldom goes together with practical wisdom, or perhaps even common sense. However, Milton Friedman not only excelled in the scholarly journals but also on the television screen, presenting the basics of economics in a way that the general public could understand.
His mini-series "Free to Choose" was a classic that made economic principles clear to all with living examples. His good nature and good humor also came through in a way that attracted and held an audience.
Although Friedrich Hayek launched the first major challenge to the prevailing thinking behind the welfare state and socialism with his 1944 book "The Road to Serfdom," Milton Friedman became the dominant intellectual force among those who turned back the leftward tide in what had seemed to be the wave of the future.
Without Milton Friedman's role in changing the minds of so many Americans, it is hard to imagine how Ronald Reagan could have been elected president.
Nor was Friedman's influence confined to the United States. His ideas reached around the world, not only among economists, but also in political circles which began to understand why left-wing ideas that sounded so good produced results that were so bad.
Milton Friedman rates a 21-gun salute on his birthday. Or perhaps a 90-gun salute would be more appropriate.
Freidman is to economics what Ted Williams was to hitting.
No reflection on Sowell but one wonders what the reaction to locking out a black student for being tardy would be today.
Free to Choose was written specifically for the non-economists of the world. It's well worth looking for a copy.
Happy Birthday Dr. Friedman!
i respectfully disagree. free to choose is an excellent example.
I've personally kept track of Milton's "theories" over the years and have yet to find a large hole in any of them.
As the article points out, he derailed Keynes. Quite amazingly, the Democrats climbed on board with Friedman's monetary policy after Carter's (and inflation's) last hurrah. He also explained how the brand new Federal Reserve Board caused the great depression by tightening the money supply when the nation needed liquidity.
He correctly predicted the downfall of schools - suggesting vouchers way back when and currently an end to mandatory education. He had similar warnings on welfare (interim solution - a negative income tax), regulations (FDA), tarrifs, social security, minimum wage laws, and worst of all- the tyranny resulting from Socialism.
We are interacting on a medium that proves Friedmans' theory perfectly. For 25 years government and universities ran the Internet. It had lots of good information on it. Technically, any of us could have gone online during that time--and a small handful did. As soon as the ".com" ("commercial") was added in the mid-1990's, however, ZOOM!
It is precisely to meet the "selfish" end of the "greedy" capitalists that we have the well-used, relatively user-friendly Internet of today, and the far, far better Internet we will have tomorrow. Meanwhile, what does the government want to do with the Internet? Censor it. Control it. Regulate it to death. [from drugsense.org]
"The society that puts equality before freedom will end up with neither. The society that puts freedom before equality will end up with a great measure of both." -MF
If it were not for Free to Choose I might be a Democrat today. It certainly influenced my thinking more than any other book I've ever read. Maybe you already realize all the insights in this book, give it to your confused liberal friends and ask them to read it with an open mind.
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