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    Customs and culture

    Requiescat in pace, Milton Friedman

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    Requiescat in pace, Milton Friedman

    Comment
    I suppose this could be posted under "Customs and Culture" as it deals with a man whose thought has certainly defined much of the latter part of 20th century America, as well as the 21st in even more countries. Milton Friedman was a shining light among economist and he will be sorely missed - but his ideas will live on.

    I offer this link (containing even more links) for those of you who can access it:

    http://www.reason.com/blog/show/116775.html

    For the rest, I offer this from CNN:

    Nobel economist Milton Friedman dead at 94
    An advocate of deregulation and 'supply-side' policies whose influence soared under Ronald Reagan.

    Milton Friedman, the Nobel-prize winning economist who helped shape modern free-market economics, died Thursday in San Francisco. He was 94.

    A spokesman for the Milton & Rose Friedman Foundation confirmed the news to CNN. The cause was heart failure, according to Reuters.

    Friedman, who won the Nobel prize in 1976, helped interpret and popularize so-called "supply-side" economics, which came to dominate much of U.S. public policy in the second half of the 20th century.

    Supply-side economics holds that minimally regulated markets offer the most efficiency in the distribution of goods and services. The theory was prevalent until it fell out of favor during the Great Depression, when Keynesian economics became popular.

    Friedman won the Nobel in 1976 for "his achievements in the fields of consumption analysis, monetary history and theory and for his demonstration of the complexity of stabilization policy," according to the Nobel Prize Web site.

    Friedman's theories, which included tight fiscal discipline and deregulation of markets, grew influential in the United States after Ronald Reagan became president.

    Friedman's ideas were embraced by President Reagan and British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher in the 1980s and lauded by many in the business world. But they were also controversial due to the deep cuts in government spending and the more restricted role they entailed for government in buffering citizens from economic forces.

    Friedman was regarded as the leader of the Chicago School of monetary economics and the leading proponent of free-market theory.

    The Chicago School regarded the quantity of money as a key instrument of government policy, capable of influencing inflation and business cycles, according to his biography at the Hoover Institution, where Friedman served as a research fellow.

    The changes brought about by Friedman's economic work represented a departure from Keynesian economic philosophy, which included generous provisions for the unemployed and wage and price controls. John Maynard Keynes was an English economist influential in the first half of the 20th century.

    Overseas, Friedman's work helped shape policies used in Chile in the 1970s. His influence raised eyebrows among critics because of the repressive political situation in the country in that period.

    Edward Crane, founder and president of the libertarian Cato Institute, said, "Milton was in my mind the greatest champion of freedom in the 20th century. He was a warm, intelligent, wonderful human being and will be deeply missed."

    "Milton changed the direction of the world," said Crane, who recalled attending a conference with Friedman in China in 1988 where Friedman was received like a "like a rock star" for his reputation as champion of free markets and a free society. "His first policy concern was freeing people from government influence in their lives," said Crane.

    California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger said in a statement: "Milton was one of the great thinkers and economists of the 20th century, and when I was first exposed to his powerful writings about money, free markets and individual freedom, it was like getting hit by a thunderbolt."

    Even economists who didn't always agree with Friedman agreed on his wide influence.

    [Friedman] "had an enormous impact on the shape of most economies in the world in the last 25 to 35 years," said Mark Weisbrot, economist at the progressive Center for Economic and Policy Research.

    "If you go back to his book Capitalism and Freedom [published in 1962], it wasn't even reviewed by major reviewers like New York Times. By the end of Reagan's last term, most of his policies were implemented," Weisbrot said.

    "Friedman fought a counterrevolution in the 1950s against Kenyesianism," said Weisbrot. "He succeeded in that policy moved to the right and the concerns of workers took a back seat compared to those of creditors and bankers."

    Crane said that Milton "never demeaned the motives of his opponents, although they did him. Milton was always willing to talk to anyone. He was respectful of a questions asked him."

    Friedman was born in Brooklyn, New York in 1912 to immigrant parents from a province of what was then part of the Austria-Hungary Empire.

    He received a B.A. from Rutgers University in 1932, an M.A. from the University of Chicago the next year and a Ph.D. from Columbia University.
    Author Solitudinarian (236315) 16 Nov 06, 21:51
    Comment
    Requiescat in peace, Milton Friedman
    #1AuthorAutocorr.16 Nov 06, 22:09
    Comment
    @autocorr.:

    "Requiescat in pace" = Latin for: "Rest in Peace"
    #2Author Ulrich05 (236177) 16 Nov 06, 22:34
    Comment
    Im unwahrscheinlichen Fall, dass die als Prekariat euphemisierten Gefressenen im von Friedmann gewünschten Haifischbecken dieses Forum frequentieren, würden sie ihm wohl ein paar unruhige Minuten auf dem Totenbett wünschen.
    Ich weiss, wovon ich rede.
    #3AuthorKarl Marx16 Nov 06, 22:34
    Comment
    @ Karl Marx

    Zweifellos, aber ich hoffe, etwas mehr Mitgefühl zu sehen. Nicht mal dich würde ich zum Teufel wünschen (von deinen Anhängern reden wir später mal).
    #4Author Solitudinarian (236315) 16 Nov 06, 22:38
    Comment
    A bump out of remembrance.
    #5Author Solitudinarian (236315) 17 Nov 06, 05:23
    Comment
    >California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger said in a statement: "Milton was one of the great thinkers and economists of the 20th century, and when I was first exposed to his powerful writings about money, free markets and individual freedom, it was like getting hit by a thunderbolt."

    Schwarzenegger und Friedman waren per "Du"?
    #6Author Mattes (236368) 17 Nov 06, 13:42
    Comment
    Sorry, ich hätte erst mal selbst forschen sollen. Schwarzenegger ist ein Fan, und Friedman hat ihn beraten.
    "As Schwarzenegger has noted in a PBS series, economist Milton Friedman's free-market theories helped spur his rise to wealth and Americanization."
    aus http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/commentar... , mit lustigem Bild von den beiden.
    #7Author Mattes (236368) 17 Nov 06, 13:53
    Comment
    @Mattes:
    Wenn mich meine Erinnerung jetzt nicht täuscht, ist auch in der bereits vor etlichen Jahren erschienenen Schwarzenegger-Autobiografie "Karriere eines Bodybuilders" (bzw. "Education of a Bodybuilder"!) ein Foto drin, das Arnie und Friedman im "feinen Zwirn" bei irgendeinem gesellschaftlichen Anlass zeigt -
    schließlich hat der Governator ja u.a. auch mal ein Wirtschaftsstudium absolviert ...
    #8Authorwoody17 Nov 06, 14:55
    Comment
    @Karl Marx und Solitudinarian: Es war glaube ich in den frühen Achzigern, als in der Mainzer Fastnacht jemand von sich gab: "Marx ist die Theorie, Murx ist die Praxis" - Ich würde sagen, das trifft's ganz gut für beide Denkschulen, bloß, dass "Friedman ist die Theorie, Murx ist die Praxis" sich irgendwie nicht so toll anhört :)
    #9AuthorKurKrü17 Nov 06, 18:13
    Comment
    De mortui nil nisi bene. Also schweigt des Sängers Höflichkeit.
    #10AuthorAM<de> (236333) 20 Nov 06, 12:12
     
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