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The life and times of Milton Friedman: remembering the 20th century's most influential libertarian.


WHEN MILTON FRIEDMAN Noun 1. Milton Friedman - United States economist noted as a proponent of monetarism and for his opposition to government intervention in the economy (born in 1912)
Friedman
 stepped forward on December 10, 1976, to receive the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences: see Bank of Sweden Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel under Nobel Prize.  from the King of Sweden, he needed bodyguards. His moment of glory was marred by a mob of protesters outside gathering to condemn Friedman's alleged complicity in the crimes of the military regime ruling Chile, which allegedly lived and died according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 his theories. One heckler heck·le  
tr.v. heck·led, heck·ling, heck·les
1. To try to embarrass and annoy (someone speaking or performing in public) by questions, gibes, or objections; badger.

2. To comb (flax or hemp) with a hatchel.
 even slipped inside, shouting "down with capitalism, freedom for Chile" from the balcony.

It was a telling moment in a controversial career. Despite being a professional academic, Friedman had never locked himself away in an ivory tower ivory tower
n.
A place or attitude of retreat, especially preoccupation with lofty, remote, or intellectual considerations rather than practical everyday life.
. Until his death at the age of 94 on November 16, 2006, he remained an intellectual warrior for ideas in the day-to-day world, and he helped change that world in important and positive ways. Along the way he made a lot of enemies, some of whom shouted their insults from places more respectable than a mob outside the Stockholm Concert Hall The Stockholm Concert Hall (Konserthuset) is the main hall for orchestral music in Stockholm, Sweden. Designed by Ivar Tengbom and inaugurated in 1926, it is the home to the Royal Stockholm Philharmonic Orchestra. .

Writing in The Washington Post, the Washington Post, The

Morning daily newspaper published in Washington, D.C., the dominant paper in the U.S. capital and one of the nation's leading newspapers. Established in 1877 as a Democratic Party organ, it changed orientation and ownership several times and faced
 journalist Bernard Nossiter claimed Friedman won only because the Nobel in economics, rather than being one of the original prizes established in Alfred Nobel's will, was a later addition financed by the Swedish Central Bank--and central banks This is a list of central banks.

Contents A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W Y Z
, he declared, adored Friedman. In fact, Friedman had long advocated the abolition of the U.S. Federal Reserve, the world's mightiest central bank. He thought it better to replace its control over interest rates and the money supply with a mechanical rule for monetary growth.

In The New Republic, in those days the leading voice of American liberalism, Melville J. Ulmer likened Friedman's economics prize to a peace prize for Idi Amin or a literature prize for Spiro Agnew Spiro Theodore Agnew (November 9, 1918 – September 17, 1996) was the thirty-ninth Vice President of the United States, serving under President Richard M. Nixon, and the fifty-fifth Governor of Maryland. . While acknowledging that no economist seemed surprised or appalled at Friedman's laurel, Ulmer claimed that "much of the world" bridled at his winning. Despite his pique, Ulmer did accurately summarize what Friedman represented for the millions of people who read his popular column of political and economic commentary in Newsweek and the hundreds of thousands who had read his 1962 book Capitalism and Freedom, which argued that free markets were an essential part of any truly free society.

"Friedman," Ulmer wrote, "is best known as a tireless, peppery pep·per·y  
adj.
1. Of, containing, or resembling pepper; sharp or pungent in flavor.

2. Vigorously sharp-tempered: a peppery sales clerk.

3.
 advocate of liberalism in the 19th century European sense, perhaps the nation's outstanding intellectual exponent of laissez-faire.... He opposes government activity of practically all kinds.... He would abolish virtually all regulations on industry, working conditions, and the professions. He would turn over to private industry the nation's schools, highways, federal parks, the post office and all other publicly operated services like water supply, local buses and subways. He would scrap Social Security, the entire welfare system and the progressive income tax schedule. Few, if any, measures to protect the environment or the consumer would win his approval. He would terminate all government efforts to stabilize the economy through fiscal and monetary policies, public works public works
pl.n.
Construction projects, such as highways or dams, financed by public funds and constructed by a government for the benefit or use of the general public.

Noun 1.
 or other means. He would leave presidential candidates, and I suppose all other candidates for public office, with nothing to talk about" (Italics in original.)

Friedman did call for all that, and the intellectual acumen that won him the Nobel helped him become the most widely heeded and influential advocate for libertarian ideas in the 20th century. Because of his successes, we now live, to a delightful degree, in Friedman's world. Beyond his specific policy victories on matters such as ending the draft and curbing inflation, on a higher level he lived to see communism, the antithesis of his economic and social beliefs, die. Smuggled smug·gle  
v. smug·gled, smug·gling, smug·gles

v.tr.
1. To import or export without paying lawful customs charges or duties.

2. To bring in or take out illicitly or by stealth.
 copies of Friedman's writings helped inspire and educate dissidents in the Soviet bloc, and the most economically successful former republic of the USSR USSR: see Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. , Estonia, achieved its growth with policies inspired directly by Friedman's work.

Throughout his life, Friedman spoke bravely and compellingly for the idea that the world should be shaped by our free choices. Reviewing his life and career as an economist and polemicist po·lem·i·cist   also po·lem·ist
n.
A person skilled or involved in polemics.


polemicist, polemist
a skilled debater in speech or writing. — polemical, adj.
, we find a story of unexpected, unprecedented success promoting ideas that pushed against the Zeitgeist and in many ways managed to change it.

Friedman the Young Scholar

Milton Friedman was born in Brooklyn on July 31, 1912, the son of two Jewish immigrants from Carpatho-Ruthenia, now part of Ukraine. Both of his parents worked as dry goods dry goods
pl.n.
Textiles, clothing, and related articles of trade. Also called soft goods.

dry goods npl (COMM) → mercería sg

dry goods 
 merchants when they moved to Rahway, New Jersey, shortly after Milton was born.

Friedman originally intended to be a mathematician, and later an actuary. He studied at Rutgers under two professors who imbued him with a passion for economics: Arthur Burns, who later became chairman of Friedman's bete noire bête noire  
n.
One that is particularly disliked or that is to be avoided: "Tax shelters had long been the bête noire of reformers" Irwin Ross.
, the Federal Reserve, and Homer Jones For the football player of the same name see Homer Jones (football player). For the economist, see Homer Jones (economist).

Homer Raymond Jones (3 September, 1893–26 November 1970), an American politician, served as a member of the United States House of
, who was pursuing a doctorate at the University of Chicago while teaching at Rutgers. Jones helped Friedman win a scholarship to pursue a master's degree master's degree
n.
An academic degree conferred by a college or university upon those who complete at least one year of prescribed study beyond the bachelor's degree.

Noun 1.
 in economics at Chicago, which Friedman chose over an offer to study mathematics at Brown. His choice was inspired by the ongoing Great Depression and his belief that economists could help solve it. That decision guided the rest of Friedman's career, as his reputation would be forever intertwined with the University of Chicago, the colleagues and students he met there, and the intellectual tradition its economics department came to represent.

Friedman started at Chicago in the fall of 1932; there he met his future wife and writing partner, Rose Director. He earned his master's degree at Chicago in 1933 and took a graduate fellowship at Columbia University Columbia University, mainly in New York City; founded 1754 as King's College by grant of King George II; first college in New York City, fifth oldest in the United States; one of the eight Ivy League institutions. , where the influential statistician Harold Hotelling Harold Hotelling (Fulda, Minnesota, september 29, 1895 - december 26, 1973) was a mathematical statistician, and very influential economic theorist. His name is known to all statisticians because of Hotelling's T-square distribution and its use in statistical hypothesis testing and  gave him a grounding in that discipline. He initially found it hard to land an academic teaching post in part, he suspected, because of anti-Semitism. So in 1935 he began a two-year stint in the federal government, on the Natural Resources Committee, doing what he described in a 1995 interview with this author as "work on the New Deal ... just [as] technical statisticians Statisticians or people who made notable contributions to the theories of statistics, or related aspects of probability, or machine learning: A to E
  • Odd Olai Aalen (1947–)
  • Gottfried Achenwall (1719–1772)
  • Abraham Manie Adelstein (1916–1992)
 and economists, not anything that had any policy role."

In 1937 Friedman began his long affiliation with the National Bureau of Economic Research The National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) is a "private, nonprofit, nonpartisan research organization" dedicated to studying the science and empirics of economics, especially the American economy.  (NBER NBER National Bureau of Economic Research (Cambridge, MA)
NBER Nittany and Bald Eagle Railroad Company
). There he began the work that led to his doctoral dissertation and the first of many controversies over conclusions too libertarian for some of his colleagues. Working with future Nobel laureate Noun 1. Nobel Laureate - winner of a Nobel prize
Nobelist

laureate - someone honored for great achievements; figuratively someone crowned with a laurel wreath
 and national income statistics pioneer Simon Kuznets Noun 1. Simon Kuznets - United States economist (born in Russia) who developed a method for using a country's gross national product to estimate its economic growth (1901-1985)
Kuznets
, Friedman produced a study that bothered an official on an NBER review board. (It doubled as his doctoral thesis at Columbia, which gave him his Ph.D. in 1946.) The official, who worked in the pharmaceutical business, delayed publication of the work for more than three years because he objected to its assertion that professional licensing was used to restrict entry and thus raise income for licensed doctors.

Friedman lectured at Columbia during the late 1930s and taught for one year at the University of Wisconsin in 1940-41. In 1941 he was offered a position at the U.S. Treasury's tax research division, where he worked until 1943. There he was partially responsible for developing the withholding system for paying income tax. Many libertarians, including his own wife, have excoriated Friedman for this. "We were paying almost no attention to the postwar consequences of anything we did" Friedman admitted years later. "We were just asking ourselves: What can we do to win the war? I have no apologies for it, but I really wish we hadn't found it necessary to do that and I wish there were some way of abolishing withholding now."

It was at the Treasury Department that Friedman discovered a feature of bureaucracies that later became a central theme in his 1984 book The Tyranny of the Status Quo [Latin, The existing state of things at any given date.] Status quo ante bellum means the state of things before the war. The status quo to be preserved by a preliminary injunction is the last actual, peaceable, uncontested status which preceded the pending controversy. : They are loath to change. The Internal Revenue Service, Friedman later recalled, was the biggest opponent of the withholding idea, insisting there was no way it could work. Today, alas, it takes a different view.

For the remainder of the war, Friedman did statistical work at the Division of War Research at Columbia. He and his colleagues came up with a sampling technique, known as sequential sampling, which became, in the words of The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics, "the standard analysis of quality control inspection." The dictionary adds: "Like many of Friedman's contributions, in retrospect it seems remarkably simple and obvious to apply basic economic ideas to quality control; that however is a measure of his genius." He was also a key member of the team that developed a new proximity fuse for anti-aircraft projectiles, preventing bombs from going off unless they are near the object they are meant to destroy.

After the war, Friedman taught at Chicago from 1946 to 1976, with occasional stints as a visiting professor at other institutions. At Chicago he was not only a teacher but a prime intellectual mentor to generations of young economists who tended to approach both economics and politics in a Friedmanite manner, making the "Chicago school Chicago School

Group of architects and engineers who in the 1890s exploited the twin developments of structural steel framing and the electrified elevator, paving the way for the ubiquitous modern-day skyscraper.
" America's most influential brand of pro-market economic thought.

Friedman the Libertarian

In 1962 Friedman published Capitalism and Freedom, a comprehensive exposition of the libertarian position. The book made his first major splash outside his academic discipline. It was launched into a barren environment for individualist thought. As Friedman later noted, though it was "destined des·tine  
tr.v. des·tined, des·tin·ing, des·tines
1. To determine beforehand; preordain: a foolish scheme destined to fail; a film destined to become a classic.

2.
 to sell more than 400,000 copies in the next 18 years, written by an established professor at a leading university and published by a leading university press ... it was not reviewed in a single popular American publication."

Capitalism and Freedom contained almost all the themes Friedman would stress during his career as a public intellectual. It emphasized the connection between economic and political freedom--a familiar idea today but not in the early 1960s, when the dream of democratic socialism  'Democratic socialism advocates socialism as a basis for the economy and democracy as a governing principle. This means that the means of production are owned by the entire population and that political power would be in the hands of the people through a democratic state.  was still prevalent. It explained how markets permit unanimity without conformity--that they allow us all, for the most part, to get the products and services we want, even if they aren't the same as what the majority wants. It gave some credence to the danger of monopolies but still argued that an unregulated private monopoly is a lesser evil than government attempts to regulate it, on the grounds that "dynamic changes are highly likely to undermine" private monopolies, while government programs and regulations tend to last forever. Friedman granted that certain market actions might have neighborhood effects--harms, such as pollution, that affect third parties--and that those might warrant government action. But he advised that the initial presumption must always be against such action.

Friedman explained how unions help cartelize car·tel·ize  
tr. & intr.v. car·tel·ized, car·tel·iz·ing, car·tel·iz·es
To form as or become a cartel.



car
 industry, to the consumer's detriment. He attacked the idea of "corporate responsibility" (Friedman believed a corporation's responsibility to its shareholders is simply to make profits, and that individual shareholders should be able to decide for themselves how much of their money they want to give to other causes, not have that decision made for them by corporate executives.) He showed how occupational licensing allows professionals to block competition and neither ensures quality nor helps consumers. He accepted the idea of a government-set income floor but advocated a negative income tax--a set stipend that you could spend as you wished--as a replacement for all current welfare programs. That, he insisted, is the cheapest and least bureaucratic way to assist the poor, and the method that leaves them with the greatest personal autonomy. This idea entered the policy debate over poverty programs before the decade ended and influenced the earned income tax credit The United States federal Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) is a refundable tax credit that reduces or eliminates the taxes that low-income married working people pay (such as payroll taxes) and also frequently operates as a wage subsidy for low-income workers.  we now have.

Capitalism and Freedom was filled with Friedman's particular concerns as a monetary economist. He called for strict rules defining a set rate of growth in the money supply from year to year. He also called for floating exchange rates between national currencies--allowing the price of currency in international markets to be set by market forces, not government commands.

The book argued for the abolition of a long list of government functions: price supports, tariffs, licensing, minimum wages, Social Security, housing subsidies, the draft, toll roads The following is a list of toll roads. Toll roads are roads on which a toll authority collects a fee for use. This list also contains toll bridges and toll tunnels. Lists of these subsets of toll roads can be found in List of toll bridges and List of toll tunnels. , the post office, and national parks This is a list of national parks ordered by nation. Africa
See also:
  • Algeria
  • Botswana
  • Chad
  • Ethiopia
  • Gabon
  • Kenya
  • Madagascar
  • Morocco
  • Mozambique
  • Namibia
. The one that is now gone, the draft, was Friedman's pet issue, and his role in its abolition is the policy victory of which he was most proud.

Martin Anderson, the libertarian-leaning author of The Federal Bulldozer (on the dire effects of urban renewal), had been director of research for the 1968 Nixon campaign, and he was a special assistant to the president in the early days of the Nixon administration. Anderson had already been influenced by Friedman's arguments for a volunteer military, and he urged Nixon to appoint a 15-member advisory commission, with Friedman as a member, to contemplate the future of the draft. The president adopted the suggestion, creating the Gates Commission--named after Chairman Thomas Gates Thomas Gates was the name of:
  • Sir Thomas Gates (governor) (1585–1621), of the Virginia Company, an early leader and governor of the Colony of Virginia
  • Thomas Sovereign Gates (1873–1948), U.S.
, a former secretary of defense--in March 1969.

Friedman used his polemical powers to win the commission over to his belief in an all-volunteer army. Vietnam troop commander A Troop Commander is an officer in the British Army, who commands 15 other soldiers (a troop) and their vehicles. A troop usually consists of four or sometimes more armored vehicles such as tanks and APCs.  William Westmoreland William C. Westmoreland (March 26, 1914 – July 18, 2005) was an American General who commanded American military operations in the Vietnam War at its peak from 1964 to 1968 and who served as US Army Chief of Staff from 1968 to 1972.  gruffly announced during one commission hearing that he was not interested in leading an army of "mercenaries." Friedman coolly replied, "Would you rather command an army of slaves?"

Westmoreland bristled bris·tle  
n.
1. A stiff hair.

2. A stiff hairlike structure: the bristles of a wire brush.

v. bris·tled, bris·tling, bris·tles

v.intr.
. "I don't like to hear our patriotic draftees referred to as slaves," he said. "I don't like to hear our patriotic volunteers referred to as mercenaries," Friedman snapped back--and pointed out that if they were, then he was a mercenary professor and Westmoreland a mercenary general.

At the outset, the commission's members ostensibly os·ten·si·ble  
adj.
Represented or appearing as such; ostensive: His ostensible purpose was charity, but his real goal was popularity.
 were evenly split three ways--five opposed to the draft, five in favor, five undecided. In less than a year of meetings, spurred by Friedman's argumentative Controversial; subject to argument.

Pleading in which a point relied upon is not set out, but merely implied, is often labeled argumentative. Pleading that contains arguments that should be saved for trial, in addition to allegations establishing a Cause of Action or
 power and moral force, the commission unanimously recommended ending the draft in February 1970. (That said, with Anderson's thumb on the scales, the commission was intended from the beginning to come up with a workable, realistic plan for shifting to an all-volunteer force.) Nixon agreed with the general shape of the Gates Commission's suggestions, though he didn't move as quickly as Friedman would have wanted (the draft didn't officially end until 1973); nor did he raise the salaries of enlisted men as much as Friedman thought would be necessary and proper.

The political pressure of street unrest was also important in compelling Nixon to end the draft. But Nixon later said that "I would not have followed through after the election had I not become convinced that a voluntary army was economically feasible and militarily acceptable." And that achievement was largely the result of Friedman's persuasive power.

Friedman the Economist

As an economist, Friedman is best known as the apostle of "monetarism monetarism, economic theory that monetary policy, or control of the money supply, is the primary if not sole determinant of a nation's economy. Monetarists believe that management of the money supply to produce credit ease or restraint is the chief factor influencing ": the idea that changes in the money supply are the prime causes of inflation and the business cycle. Over time, this view triumphed over the Keynesian notion that fiscal policy--taxing and spending--is government's best tool to manage the economy. Friedman argued that fiscal policy was likely to be impotent in the long term. In the simplest layman's terms, if the government taxed to spend more, citizens would have that much less to spend. If the government borrowed to spend more, that much less money would be available for private borrowers. Similarly, if the government tried the reverse fiscal policies, spending less by cutting either taxes or borrowing, it would leave more for citizens to spend. Hence government attempts to manipulate "aggregate demand" are generally useless, since no matter what the government does to manipulate its own demand, counterbalancing changes in demand from the private sector in the opposite direction would blunt those effects.

Even if fiscal policy could have some useful effects, which Friedman doubted, there's no reason to believe government managers could use the policy at the right times and in the proper amounts to achieve the desired effect. As he wrote in Capitalism and Freedom, what government fiscal manipulations really tended to do was introduce "a largely random disturbance that is simply added to other disturbances." Besides, private spending was a truer representation of consumer wants than government spending Government spending or government expenditure consists of government purchases, which can be financed by seigniorage, taxes, or government borrowing. It is considered to be one of the major components of gross domestic product. .

Friedman famously believed that the true test of economic theory was not whether it seemed to make sense but whether it led to testable predictions that were borne out by observable evidence. Thus he didn't depend only on logical argument to make his point. He and his collaborator Anna Schwartz scrupulously accrued data that showed, in as close to controlled experiments as history allows, how monetary changes usually had far greater effect on nominal income Nominal income

Income that has not been adjusted for inflation and decreasing purchasing power.
, prices, and output than did fiscal changes.

That doesn't mean monetary policy provides a magic wand for the government to use in fine-tuning the economy. The juicy libertarian implication of Friedman's dry and scientific work is that government stabilization attempts, whether through fiscal or monetary policy, are bound to fail, since the effects of money on the economy work only through a lag that's both long and variable. Any attempt to respond to an economic ailment ail·ment
n.
A physical or mental disorder, especially a mild illness.
 by increasing or decreasing the money supply is apt to be either too little, too late or too much, too soon. When the Federal Reserve jiggers with the money supply, it is as likely to exacerbate problems as solve them.

Friedman thus thought the Fed should lose its ability to make such arbitrary decisions. He advocated abolishing the central bank and setting money growth on automatic pilot: a 3 percent to 5 percent increase each year, to keep up with expected growth in population and production.

This was heresy to the Keynesians. The "Phillips Curve Phillips curve

Graphic representation of the inverse relationship between the rate of unemployment and the rate of change in money wages. In 1958 A. W. Phillips plotted British unemployment rates and rates of change in money wages and found that when unemployment rates were
" supposedly showed that the government could manipulate a tradeoff between unemployment and inflation: By increasing inflation, the Fed could give the economy a revivifying jolt that would create jobs. Friedman's theories explained why this might sometimes appear to be so but also why in the long term it was not so--and how belief in the Phillips Curve helped cause the stagflation stagflation, in economics, a word coined in the 1970s to describe a combination of a stagnant economy and severe inflation. Previously, these two conditions had not existed at the same time because lowered demand, brought about by a recession (see depression),  of the 1970s, which perplexed Keynesian economic managers by combining inflation with a lack of economic growth.

New money in the economy can give businesses the mistaken impression of greater demand for their specific product, leading them to increase production and hire more people. This is the initial jolt that makes inflation an irresistible drug to politicians. But after a while, people realize there was no real increased demand for their product in relation to all other products; the apparent extra demand was merely a result of more money in people's hands. The holders of the extra money begin to bid up all prices and soon realize their overall purchasing power Purchasing Power

1. The value of a currency expressed in terms of the amount of goods or services that one unit of money can buy. Purchasing power is important because, all else being equal, inflation decreases the amount of goods or services you'd be able to purchase.

2.
 is falling. They then try to spend more, faster, and for a while nominal incomes increase more than the general inflation rate as the extra money enters specific people's hands before the overall price level rises to catch up. Only with constantly accelerating rates of inflation can the initial Phillips Curve effect that increased employment keep working--and that path can end only by reducing the currency to uselessness.

On that issue, Friedman's views carried the day. But another Keynesian notion--using targeted tax breaks to achieve an immediate economic stimulus--still enjoys political support. Friedman helped to discredit that idea in what he considered his greatest achievement as an economist, his 1957 book The Theory of the Consumption Function. Friedman challenged the notion that people made consumption decisions based on how much money was available to them at any given moment. Consumption decisions were instead based on a theoretical construct Friedman called "permanent income." If someone gains a sudden windfall, he isn't apt to spend it all immediately; if he suffers a sudden loss, he isn't apt to immediately cut his consumption by the amount of that loss. One implication of this theory is that if the government attempts to manipulate our economic behavior through quick tax raises or cuts here mad there, the effects are not likely to be what the politicians hope for.

Although Friedman frequently was on the "wrong side" of his profession, in the sense that his beliefs went against then-standard opinions, the cogency of his reasoning, his rigorous reliance on empirical evidence, and such real-world phenomena as stagflation ensured that, as the Fortune Encyclopedia of Economics put it, "No other economist since Keynes has reshaped the way we think about and use economics as much as Milton Friedman."

Friedman the Adviser

Friedman had a long-lasting and controversial avocation as an adviser to politicians and governments across the globe. This began in 1950, when some former students invited him to work with a Marshall Plan Marshall Plan or European Recovery Program, project instituted at the Paris Economic Conference (July, 1947) to foster economic recovery in certain European countries after World War II. The Marshall Plan took form when U.S.  agency. While there he proposed that Germany float its exchange rate. The idea went nowhere at the time, but it was an international reality as of 1973.

Friedman went on over the course of his career to give advice to officials in nations from Israel to China, from England to Yugoslavia. This practice caused him great trouble in the 1970s because of his "links" to Augusto Pinochet's repressive regime in Chile. Pinochet's government was infamous for the brutal suppression of political opponents, including one grim episode in which a football stadium was used as a mass detention center where political prisoners were tortured and killed.

For years, the University of Chicago had a partnership with the Catholic University of Chile “Universidad de Chile” redirects here. For the football club, see Club de Fútbol Universidad de Chile.

History
Background
Higher education in Chile in colonial times dates back to 1622, when on 19 August of that year, the first university in Chile,
 in which Chileans received scholarships to study at Chicago. Pinochet thus had Chicago-trained economic advisers, who were known as "the Chicago boys" and often assumed to be mindless transmitters of Friedman's commands. New Fork Times columnist Anthony Lewis declared in 1975 that "the Chilean junta's economic policy is based on the ideas of Milton Friedman ... and his Chicago School," adding that "if the pure Chicago economic theory can be carried out in Chile only at the price of repression, should its authors feel some responsibility?" The Spartacus Youth League, a Trotskyist sect, began ginning up protests against Friedman for his alleged complicity with the Chilean government. Such demonstrators followed him wherever he went for years.

In fact, Friedman's only direct connection with Chile came when fellow Chicago economist Arnold Harberger, who was closely involved with the Chilean program, invited him to give a week of lectures and public talks in Chile in 1975. While there, Friedman did have one brief meeting with Pinochet. The dictator asked the professor to write him a letter laying out what he thought Chile's economic policies should be. Friedman did this, calling for quick and severe cuts in government spending and inflation as well as a more open trade policy. He did not take the opportunity to upbraid up·braid  
tr.v. up·braid·ed, up·braid·ing, up·braids
To reprove sharply; reproach. See Synonyms at scold.



[Middle English upbreiden, from Old English
 Pinochet for any of his repressive policies.

That was the extent of Friedman's involvement with the regime. Defending himself against accusations of complicity with or approval of Pinochet in a 1975 letter to the University of Chicago student newspaper, Friedman noted that when he spoke to communist leaders he "never heard complaints" that he was giving aid and comfort to their governments. "I approve of none of these authoritarian regimes--neither the Communist regimes of Russia and Yugoslavia nor the military juntas of Chile and Brazil," he wrote. "But I believe I can learn from observing them and that, insofar in·so·far  
adv.
To such an extent.

Adv. 1. insofar - to the degree or extent that; "insofar as it can be ascertained, the horse lung is comparable to that of man"; "so far as it is reasonably practical he should practice
 as my personal analysis of their economic situation enables them to improve their economic performance, that is likely to promote not retard a movement toward greater liberalism and freedom."

Friedman the Polemicist

Friedman was the most widely read libertarian polemicist of his time, mostly thanks to his Newsweek column. From 1966 to 1984, in the context of commenting on current events, Friedman explained to millions of readers the basics of intelligent monetary policy; why wage and price controls can't be effective; why urban renewal, rent control, the minimum wage, and usury laws Usury laws

Laws limiting the amount of interest that can be charged on loans.
 don't work as advertised; and his principle, now taken very seriously among fiscal conservatives, that since governments always spend what they tax plus some more, you should never raise taxes in an attempt to eliminate deficit spending Deficit spending

When government spending overwhelms government revenue resulting in government borrowing.


deficit spending

Expenditures that are in excess of revenues during a given period of time.
. He also advocated school vouchers, an idea that would become the focus of his polemical energy during his final years through the work of the Milton and Rose D. Friedman Foundation.

Friedman's other great splash as a libertarian polemicist was his TV series and book Free to Choose, both of which he produced in collaboration with his wife, Rose. The series aired nationally on PBS PBS
 in full Public Broadcasting Service

Private, nonprofit U.S. corporation of public television stations. PBS provides its member stations, which are supported by public funds and private contributions rather than by commercials, with educational, cultural,
 in 1980, with each episode reaching, on average, 3 million viewers. The book version, released the same year, sold 400,000 copies in hardcover. The book and the TV series revisited Friedman's basic theme that the free market's competitive forces, rather than government controls, are the best guarantee of wealth and satisfaction for the largest number of people, whether in our roles as producers, consumers, or citizens. They also praised the varied, rich, and lovable culture that arises when people have the widest possible range of choices in how they live, work, spend their money, and educate their children.

Friedman the World Changer Changer

The name given to a clearing member that is willing to assume the opposite position of a futures contract within a larger alternative exchange, of which it also is a clearing member.
 

In 1995 I asked Friedman how he explained his unique success as an advocate of libertarian ideas. He replied that it was merely the glow of the Nobel Prize Nobel Prize, award given for outstanding achievement in physics, chemistry, physiology or medicine, peace, or literature. The awards were established by the will of Alfred Nobel, who left a fund to provide annual prizes in the five areas listed above. . But he was being too modest. Many of the qualities that guaranteed his reputation were apparent well before his Nobel, and he was the most successful libertarian polemicist of the era even before winning that award. The qualities that led to his success included his skill in buttressing his reputation as a political advocate with his professional successes as an economist; his calm, scholarly, respectful treatment of his intellectual and ideological opposition; and his willingness to suggest politically realistic steps in the direction he wanted to go rather than insisting on a leap to complete liberty.

Milton Friedman's relentless belief in the power of a free people and the justice of a free society had vivid real-world effects. Thanks to Friedman, we are no longer forced into the armed services The Constitution authorizes Congress to raise, support, and regulate armed services for the national defense. The President of the United States is commander in chief of all the branches of the services and has ultimate control over most military matters. . Thanks to Friedman's monetary ideas, the cash in our pockets is worth something close to what it was a year ago. Thanks to Friedman, many more people appreciate the arguments against government policies that are no longer considered as untouchable untouchable

Former classification of various low-status persons and those outside the Hindu caste system in Indian society. The term Dalit is now used for such people (in preference to Mohandas K.
 and unquestionably un·ques·tion·a·ble  
adj.
Beyond question or doubt. See Synonyms at authentic.



un·question·a·bil
 right as they were before he came along.

Milton Friedman was never a politician. He could never make things happen. He could only attempt to persuade his fellow citizens and their leaders, making himself an exemplar of the virtues of the truly liberal intellectual. Because of him, the world is a freer and better place.

Senior Editor Brian Doherty (bdoherty@reason.com) is author of Radicals for Capitalism: A Freewheeling free·wheel·ing  
adj.
1.
a. Free of restraints or rules in organization, methods, or procedure.

b. Heedless of consequences; carefree.

2. Relating to or equipped with a free wheel.
 History of the Modern American Libertarian Movement, from which this article is adapted. Copyright [c] 2007. Reprinted by arrangement with Public Affairs (www.publicaffairsbooks.com), a member of the Perseus Books Group. All rights reserved.
COPYRIGHT 2007 Reason Foundation
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2007, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Author:Doherty, Brian
Publication:Reason
Date:Mar 1, 2007
Words:4396
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