Tuesday, December 11, 2012

Milton Friedman



March 2012

Economics ISU
Milton Friedman


Table of Contents:
1. Background
2. Life
3. Ideas
4.Criticisms
5. Conclusion
6. Bibliography


1. Background
            Milton Friedman enrolled in his first economic class in 1930 when the most important issue at that time was the Great Depression. He believed that economists could help solve the Great Depression. This led to the rest of his career as an economist.
2. Life
            Milton Friedman was born on July 31st, 1912 in Brooklyn, New York. His parents were Jewish immigrants from Hungary and they worked as dry good merchants.
            He was a very talented student and around his 16th birthday he graduated from Rahway High School. He attended Rutgers University in New Jersey. He studied mathematics and economics and earned his bachelors degree there. He became influenced by Arthur Burns and Homer Jones, two economic professors, who convinced him that modern economics could help end the Great Depression.
            Friedman pursued his economic studies at the University of Chicago where he earned his masters degree in the year of 1933. He was further influenced by his economic professors, Jacob Viner, Frank Knight, and Henry Simmons. He earned his PhD at Columbia University in 1946. Milton met his future wife, Rose Director, while studying in Chicago.
            In 1935, Friedman moved to Washington D.C where he worked with the Natural Resources Committee large consumer budget survey. Two years later he received a job with the National Bureau of Economics Research to work with Simon Kuznets in his studies of distribution of professional incomes. They helped explain the higher incomes of physicians compared with other professionals.
            Milton Friedman married Rose Director in 1938, as soon as he got a steady income. Their first daugether, Janet, was born on Februruary 26th 1943, She beacme a lawyer. Their first son was born on February 12th, 1945. They named him David, who became an economist, author, and right wing Libertarian theorist.
            During World War Two, Friedman was appointed as an assistant professor teaching economics at the University of Wisconsin-Madison but he left due to the antisemitism that he encountered at the economics department. He returned to government service and started working at the Department of Treasury in the Division of Tax Research and he helped develop the federal withholding tax system for the United States of America. He and his colleagues created the economic term, “ sequential sampling” which meant “the standard analysis of quality control inspection”.
            Toward the end of the war, Friedman worked as a mathematical statistician at Columbia University. He was involved in focusing on problems of weapon design. He helped develop a new fuse for anti-aircraft projectiles and making sure that the fuse in the bomb wouldn’t go off unless it was near the object it intended to destroy. 
             In 1945 Friedman submitted his PhD thesis to Columbia, Incomes from Independent Professional Practice, which he co-authored with Simon Kuznets. In 1946, he accepted a position in the Economics Department at the University of Chicago, in which he stayed for the next 30 years. He helped build a community of intellectuals, known as the Chicago School of Economics. Many Nobel Prize winners graduated from there. During the same period of time, Friedman was asked by Arthur Burns, the head of the National Bureau of Economic Research, to rejoin them and he accepted the offer. He would be working at the Economics Department at the University of Chicago and at the National Bureau of Economic Research, at the same time.
            In 1963, Friedman collaborated with Anna Schwartz and they published a book called, Monetary History of the United states, 1867-1960. From 1966 to 1984, he started writing weekly columns for Newsweek Magazine, which were very influential among political and business people. From 1968 to 1978, he and Paul Samuelson together created a biweekly, half hour show where they would discuss the economic issues of that time.
            In 1976, Friedman won the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economics “for his achievements in the field of consumption analysis, monetary history and theory, and for his demonstration of the complexity of stabilization policy”. In 1977, at the age of 65, he retired form the University of Chicago and he and his wife moved to San Francisco.
            Friedman advised Richard M. Nixon during his presidential campaign in 1968 and he also served on the President's Economic Policy Advisory Board for the Ronald Reagan Administration until the end of his presidency. During 1988, Friedman received the National Medal of Science and Ronald Reagan awarded him the the Presidential Medal of Freedom.
            Friedman and his wife, began a television program a request of The Free To Choose Network in which he presented his economic ideas. The completed this project and during 1980 his 10-part series called, Free to Choose, was broadcast by PBS. This project inspired him to write a book called, Free to Choose, which was the 3rd bestselling non-fiction book of 1980.
            Milton Friedman died at the age of 94 on November 16th, 2006 . His death was announced at a conference of the Cato Institute in Washington by James A. Dorn, the institutes Vice President. All the attendees observed several moments of silence in honor. He died of heart failure after being brought to a hospital near his home in San Francisco.
3. Ideas
                        Monetarism
            Milton Friedman was known for his opinion that the government should run according to the quantity theory of money, which is that money supply has a direct, proportional relationship with price level. Monetarism is the economic belief that the most effective way for the government to influence the economy is by regulating the money supply in circulation. It aims to control inflation and the national output. Modern day monetarism was formulated by Friedman who said that too much money in circulation causes inflation and that monetary authorities should focus on maintaining price stability.
            Friedman rejected the Keynesian Theory whch was created by John Maynard Keynes who said that the government should spend more and lower taxes to stimulate the economy. Friedman held that if the government taxed more, the citizens would have less to spend.If the government borrowed to spend more, that money would not be available for private borrowers. Also if the government tried the reverse fiscal policies (which is spending less and cutting either taxes or borrowing), it would leave more for citizens to spend.
                      Laissez-faire Capitalism
            Friedman believed that free markets would resolve their own economic problems more effectively if they are left alone rather than being controlled by government intervention. He argued that governments should stop controlling their currency rates because the invisible hand would control it.
                        School Vouchers
            Friedman believed that governments should give parents vouchers equal in value to a childs education. They would use this voucher to choose the most appropriate school for their child. The good schools would attract students and the schools that did not get enough students would automatically be  closed. Thereby, there would only be good schools and the education market would take care of itself.
                        Conscription
            Friedman was against military conscription and he stated that the military draft was "inconsistent with a free society”, but he did agree that they could force military training as a reserve in case of war. He played a large role in the elimination of the draft in the United States in 1973.
                   General
            Friedman was a Liberationists who supported cutting taxes, lowering government spending, and the decriminalization of drugs. He wanted to abolish the government instituted laws that limit the economy and the minimum wage law.
4. Criticisms
                      Keynesian criticism
            Several Keynesian economists like James Galbraith and Joseph Stilgtz blamed the free market philosophy of Friedman and the Chicago School for the economic turmoil and the financial crisis of 2008. According to the  Keynesian theory made by John Maynard Keynes, the government should increase spending and even borrow money to create more employment. Then, those people who had money would spend it and stimulate the economy once again. Friedman was known to oppose this theory.
                        Great Britain Failure
            Milton Friedman was known for his belief in monetarism. It was tried in Great Britain during the 1980's. His theory was a huge disaster there and did not work. The Bank of England tried its best to make it work but the economy sank into more of a depression. Though inflation went down, the unemployment rate soared form 5.4% to 11.8%. In 1986, the Bank of England decided to abandon monetarism. At that time Friedman was an adviser for Ronald Reagan. He convinced the President to try monetarism out. This time some people said it was a success, others not. At the end of Reagan's Presidency the United States,  the national debt had risen over 3 trillion dollars due to the government spending and borrowing.
5. Conclusion
            Milton Friedman was known as one of the most influential economists of the 20th century. He  become a very public person and even advised governments overseas (as well as in North America) and had an enormous impact on economic policy. He wrote many influential economic books such as, Capitalism and Freedom, A Monetary History of United States, 1867-1960, Free to Choose and many more. Since his death and the financial crisis of 2008, his ideas on government regulation have been greatly debated but his teachings still are being supported by economists throughout the world.

6. Bibliography
            wikipedia.org
            reason.com
            achievement.org
            google.com


  



  

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