All Posts Tagged With: "Milton Friedman"

The Intellectual Defense of Liberty

All too often defenders of free-market capitalism base their defense on the demonstration that free markets allocate resources more efficiently and hence lead to greater wealth than socialism and other forms of statism. While that is true, as Professor Milton Friedman frequently pointed out, economic efficiency and greater wealth should be seen and praised as [...]

1Oct2007 | Walter E. Williams | 0 comments | Continued

Milton Friedman Is to Blame for Unsafe Food?

There is a “food safety crisis” in America and Milton Friedman is to blame, Princeton University economist Paul Krugman wrote on the New York Times op-ed page May 21. Friedman is responsible, Krugman wrote, because he legitimized a “sickening ideology” that rejects “even the most compelling” cases for government regulation of business. Krugman’s “crisis” stems [...]

1Oct2007 | Arthur E. Foulkes | 3 comments | Continued

The Great Depression According to Milton Friedman

The author extends special thanks to Lawrence H. White and Ivan Pongracic, Sr., for their helpful comments. Few events in U.S. history can rival the Great Depression for its impact. The period from 1929 to 1941 saw fundamental changes in the landscape of American politics and economics, including such monumental events as America ‘s going [...]

1Sep2007 | Ivan Pongracic Jr. | 77 comments | Continued

Something Besides Money Growth Causes Inflation?

Howard Baetjer, Jr., is a lecturer in economics at Towson University. Some economic phenomena can result from a variety of causes. A temporary increase in unemployment, for example, might be caused by a sudden, disruptive change in production technology, or in trade patterns, or in labor or tax laws; or it could be caused by [...]

1Jul2007 | Howard Baetjer Jr. | 7 comments | Continued

The Great Duration, 1929–41

Economists, following the usage of Milton Friedman and Anna Schwartz in their classic Monetary History of the United States, call the economic collapse between 1929 and 1933 the Great Contraction. In my own writings, I have added two similar terms to refer to other aspects of the Great Depression—the Great Duration and the Great Escape. [...]

1Jul2007 | Robert Higgs | 0 comments | Continued

Reason: Why Liberals Will Win the Battle for America

By Robert Reich Reviewed by George C. Leef

1Mar2007 | George C. Leef | 0 comments | Continued

The Fed’s Potent Power

The Federal Reserve holds the fate of the U.S. economy in its hands. Or that’s the conclusion many observers draw when they watch investors react wildly to the most minute details of the Fed’s policy statements. This conclusion is at once exaggerated and accurate. It’s exaggerated because, at bottom, the Fed controls only the supply [...]

1Jan2007 | Donald J. Boudreaux | 1 comment | Continued

Milton Friedman and the Chicago School of Economics

Milton Friedman, who passed away on November 16 at age 94, once commented that there is no such thing as different schools of economics; there is only good economics and bad economics. While he may have sincerely believed this, Friedman was nonetheless the twentieth century’s most outstanding contributor to what has become known as the [...]

1Dec2006 | Richard M. Ebeling | 8 comments | Continued

Milton Friedman (1912-2006)

Milton Friedman, who died last month at age 94, was one of the twentieth century’s most influential champions of individual liberty and free markets. The 1976 winner of the Nobel Prize in economics and an early associate of FEE, Friedman did more than any single person in our time to teach the public the merits [...]

1Dec2006 | and and Richard M. Ebeling | 4 comments | Continued

John Kenneth Galbraith: A Criticism and an Appreciation

Last April John Kenneth Galbraith died at the age of 97. Galbraith was one of America ‘s most famous economists and a self-proclaimed liberal (in the American sense of “statist” rather than in the European sense of “believer in freedom”). His fame came not from his technical accomplishments in academic economics but from his awesome [...]

1Dec2006 | David R. Henderson | 29 comments | Continued

The End Run to Freedom

What does the future hold for economic life in the United States? Will we move toward greater freedom or less? What role will ideas and rhetoric play, if any, in making sure that the direction is one that lovers of freedom prefer?

1Jun2006 | Russell Roberts | 0 comments | Continued

Reflections on The Freeman

“The Freeman has had a definitive influence in Guatemala, where a group of friends, inspired by FEE, founded in 1959 the Center for Social and Economic Studies, which in turn founded Francisco Marroquín University in 1971, dedicated to teaching the ethics, economics, and legal foundations of the free society. We are in debt to The [...]

1Jan2006 | FEE Admin | 0 comments | Continued

Economic Freedom: The Path to Development

Economic development has historically been exceptional rather than typical. As Peruvian economist Hernando de Soto has observed in The Mystery of Capital: Why Capitalism Triumphs in the West and Fails Everywhere Else, capitalism has been successful mainly in the West. Consequently, there are tremendous income disparities around the world. In 2000, real income per person [...]

1Apr2005 | Gerald P. O'Driscoll, Jr. | 0 comments | Continued

Half Full or Half Empty?

It’s easy being pessimistic about the future of America, especially for those of us who are classical liberals. We prefer limited government, yet government seems to continue to grow in all soils, in all weather, no matter which party’s watching the farm. As dispiriting as this growth can be, it’s good to remember that the [...]

1Apr2005 | Russell Roberts | 0 comments | Continued

Government, Fiscal Responsibility, and Free Banking

Richard Ebeling is the president of FEE. This paper was delivered at a conference on “One Hundred Years of Dollarization, or a Century without a Central Bank: The Case of Panama,” sponsored by Fundación Libertad in Panama City, Panama, on November 12, 2004. There has been no greater threat to life, liberty, and property throughout [...]

1Feb2005 | Richard M. Ebeling | 0 comments | Continued

The Mont Pelerin Society

I once had the good fortune to be present at a triangular conversation with Ludwig von Mises and Professor William Rappard of the Institute of High International Studies of Geneva. Dr. Rappard had just been appointed by the United Nations as a member of a commission to promote international intellectual cooperation and was poking light [...]

1Nov2004 | Henry Hazlitt | 1 comment | Continued

Austrian Economics and the Political Economy of Freedom

The revival of the modern Austrian school of economics may be said to have begun 30 years ago, during the week of June 15–22, 1974, when the Institute for Humane Studies sponsored a conference on Austrian economics for about 40 participants in the small town of South Royalton, Vermont. In 1974 the Austrian school had [...]

1Jun2004 | Richard M. Ebeling | 0 comments | Continued
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