Remembering Milton Friedman

shmula.com, milton friedmanBy the time I attended Chicago, Milton Friedman was no longer teaching. But, his presence was still felt and his ideas, more commonly dubbed as “the Chicago School” of thought in economic and social science circles was pervasive at Chicago and, since leaving Chicago, I see his ideas proliferate the media, academia, pop culture, and almost everywhere.

Friedman died on November 16 at the age of 94 in San Fransciso, where he lived with his wife, Rose.

Below are a few of his contributions to social science and economics; while he also contributed much to politics and mathematics, I’ll only highlight what I view to be his more well-known contributions:

In his book Free to Choose, one thread that can be found in Friedman’s work is his love for freedom, choice, and democracy. He saw free economics as an organizing principle by which to build a government; a country — free economics is consistent with a democracy and political freedom. In his words,

I know of no example in time or place of a society that has been marked by a large measure of political freedom, and that has not also used something comparable to a free market to organize the bulk of economic activity.

While I don’t completely believe in Friedman’s view that a market, left on its own, will become supra efficient (some government intervention is sometimes necessary), his contribution to the world is deserving of praise, thanks, and memorial.

Below are just a few articles about Milton Friedman; they are far from being obituaries — these are more like tributes:

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“And it quotes some of the pungent observations I remember from our shipboard dinner. Of the many presidents who turned to him for advice, Richard Nixon “had the highest IQ, but it was not matched by his character,” Friedman says in the film. Ronald Reagan was “not as intellectual, but he had high principles and he stuck to them.”"

“When we heard the news at the University of Chicago that he had died, we actually stopped arguing and were quiet for a moment. It was a most extraordinary event for Chicago economists. Each of us seemed to contemplate Mr. Friedman’s legacy for ourselves. After that bit of calm, the argument resumed. It was, perhaps, just what the old man would have wanted.”

“Mr. Friedman had long since ceased to be called a flat-earther by anyone. “What was really so important about him,” said W. Allen Wallis, a former classmate and later faculty colleague at the University of Chicago, “was his tremendous basic intelligence, his ingenuity, perseverance, his way of getting to the bottom of things — of looking at them in a new way that turned out to be right.””

The New York Times

“For right-of-center American libertarians, Milton Friedman was a powerful leader. For left-of-center American liberals, Milton Friedman was an enlightened adversary, and one whose view is now ascendant. We are all the stronger for his work. We will miss him.”

Salon

“Friedman leaves us an embarrassment of rich thoughts. He was a conservative. But he was advancing bold ideas across the ideological spectrum–from the left’s beloved earned-income tax credits to the right’s school vouchers–decades before they went mainstream. Friedman even left his own epitaph: “There’s no such thing as a free lunch.” Government inefficiency, pork-barrel projects, runaway inflation, well-intentioned subsidies–they all have costs. Guess who pays.”

The Chicago Tribune

“There was always a strong sense of friendship emanating from him and Rose. Though he really didn’t know me well, he invited me and my children to visit them in their San Francisco apartment. We still have the Polaroid photos of our boys posing with the Friedmans. I wasn’t the only one: The Friedmans have helped push forward the careers of hundreds of people, with free-market advice and affection.”

Bloomberg

“Those who were won over by his unexpected charm sometimes underestimated his resolve. He would not give a millimetre where his convictions were at stake. Although an unassuming and essentially democratic personality, he was human enough to be aware of, and enjoy, his reputation in the last decades of his life.

His professed attitude to the political process was that of the critical Public Choice theorists. The latter believe that legislators follow their self-interest in a highly defective political marketplace in which geographical and industrially-concentrated special interest groups gain at the general expense. But Friedman’s ingrained belief in the power of reason and persuasion always got the better of any such theoretical misgivings. Although he occasionally professed gloom about the future of freedom, such forebodings were best left to the central Europeans whom he met at the Mont Pelerin Society. Friedman himself was an optimistic American to his fingertips.”

The Financial Times


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Comments

hey pete,

did jim tell you about his recent experience when he travelled to china to buy manufacturing equipment for his business?

[...] Again, if I am correct in my research and claims in this article, then to make one Apple iPhone, material comes from 3 countries, traveling to China to be assembled, inventoried, and then fulfilled to retailers and to customers via purchases from the Apple Store. Is it any wonder they are asking for $500+ per unit? It is important to note, that the price has nothing to do with the costs structure — Lean and Friedman both teach us that the price has everything to do with what the market will bear. The firm has a target cost structure, a break-even point, but the price they go-to-market with is about the market demand, not internal cost structure. Assuming that I’m correct in my assertions in this article, I can only imagine that this complex supply chain is a challenging one to manage. [...]

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