On July 31st, 2009 the Minnesota Free Market Institute held it’s annual Milton Friedman birthday party. The event was a great success. Over 100 people attended the Friday afternoon event, hosted by Free Market Institute Chairman Tom Kelly. A drawing was held for 10 copies of Friedman’s Free to Choose and several Milton Friedman posters.
Senior Policy Fellow David Strom gave some brief remarks and offered a toast. Here is the text of his remarks:
It is a genuine pleasure to have the honor of toasting Milton Friedman on what would have been his 97th Birthday.
In many of Friedman’s biographies he is described as being an economist best known for having won the Nobel Prize in 1976.
That is, of course, completely wrong. If we only knew of Friedman as an economist, we hardly would know of him at all. After all, other such honored economists include:
- Ragnar Frisch and Jan Tinbergen, the very first winners of the Nobel Prize in economics in 1969
- Or Simon Kuznets, winner of the 1971 Nobel Prize
- Or how about Leonid Hurwicz, Eric S. Maskin, Roger B. Myerson who won in 2007?
- Of course we all know the 2008 winner, Paul Krugman, but primarily because he is a political crank, not because he is a prize-winning economist.
My point is simple: we have come here to celebrate Milton Friedman’s life not because of his excellent work as an economist, but because of his success as a tireless advocate for freedom.
It was not Friedman’s economic contributions that led to the abolition of the draft and the institution of an all-volunteer Army; it was his tireless working on Congress convincing them that a free labor market would produce a better army and freer citizens. And as a result fewer Americans have died in the entire Iraq war than did in a typical year of training accidents when we had the draft.
Friedman’s most memorable and popular work Free to Choose was published in 1980, along with a 10-part PBS series that took the country by storm. It was that same year, of course, that Ronald Reagan beat Jimmy Carter by a landslide and began pushing the country back from what seemed to be an inevitable slide toward socialism.
Friedman’s advocacy and Reagan’s success were not merely coincidental. In fact, I am convinced that without Milton Friedman’s sunny and optimistic promotion of Capitalism Ronald Reagan’s sunny and optimistic vision for renewing America would have had much more trouble catching on.
Friedman’s life work was promoting the idea that free markets are not just about making money to the exclusion of other values. Instead he showed how free markets are the best way for each of us to individually pursue our own vision of the good life and the good society and do so through the voluntary cooperation of others.
In these difficult times it is important to remember the contributions apostles of freedom such as Milton Friedman and Ronald Reagan have made. Without them our society would be much poorer and less free. And it is only by following their path that we can be assured of the better future we and our children all deserve.










Abandoning Capitalism to Save Capitalism?
December 19th, 2008 by David StromOver the past few months we’ve seen the most extensive government intervention in the economy since the 1930’s. In fact, today’s interventions sometimes make those of Franklin Roosevelt look tame by comparison.
Depending upon how you calculate the numbers—and that is made particularly difficult because neither the Federal Reserve or the Treasury is being particularly transparent about what they are doing—the Federal government is already on the hook for around $8 Trillion to address the current economic crisis. The CATO institute puts the number at $8.4 Trillion.
Much of that money has gone to direct investments in the financial industry, which has been partially nationalized. All indications are that soon the taxpayers will become part owners of one or more automobile manufacturers, and that the next President will be appointing a “car czar” to direct the restructuring of the auto industry, as if a government appointee can devise a magic formula for making the car companies profitable again.
This is nuts.
It would be one thing if there was any evidence that all this mucking about in the economy was doing any good, but in the months since government intervention in the economy went into overdrive the economic slump has only gotten worse. Much worse, in fact.
George Bush says that in addressing today’s financial crisis he has had to “abandon free-market principles to save the free-market system.” Well, the President has certainly succeeded in abandoning free market principles, but it’s hard to see how doing so has succeeded in saving the free market system.
All this government activity has been driven by an illusion that is shared by most politicians: that somehow, some way they can control the economy. That illusion has caused more harm over the past century than all the recessions that are an inevitable part of a capitalist economy.
There has been a growing consensus among economists that the great depression became “great” precisely because of a series of policy mistakes made by Hoover, Roosevelt, and the Federal Reserve. Japan experienced a “lost decade” of economic decline after its own real estate bubble collapsed because its government tried to prop up “zombie” banks and businesses long after it was clear that they needed to go out of business. Japan blew so much money on useless “stimulus” packages that their national debt makes ours look responsible by comparison (so far). Sound familiar?
The shortest path out of the economic mess we are in is to allow the markets to correct, however painful that might be in the short run. The alternative—abandoning free market principles and the long-term benefits of free markets—promises not just a difficult recession, but a permanent slowing of economic growth and a huge increase in the national debt.
The best way to “save the free market system” is to allow it to work.
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