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TRIBUTES AND REMEMBRANCES: A Moment with the Master
By John B. Taylor
John B. Taylor
You can tell from the cracked bindings, the loose
pages, and the frequent underlining and margin markings what the four most
loved books in my library are. They are all by Milton Friedman. I first
read them while I was a student, long before I met Milton, and I will
always find pleasure in pulling them off the shelf, rereading passages,
learning, and remembering. Essays on Positive
Economics made the case for monetary policy
rules, inflation control, and flexible exchange rates—the three
bedrocks of my approach to monetary theory and policy. A Monetary History of the United States: 1867–1960, with Anna Schwartz, convinced me more than any modern
econometric method that money is inextricably tied to the business cycle
and inflation, with long and variable lags. Price
Theory: A Provisional Text, based on his
lectures at the University of Chicago, helped me to think like an
economist—even a Chicago economist—more than any other
textbook. Capitalism and Freedom, which I first read in college in 1967, still inspires me
to promote economic freedom, most recently in our foreign policy.
It was not until I moved to Stanford and Hoover in
1984 that I had the privilege of really getting to know the person who
authored these favorite books and to benefit from a whole new set of
personal influences. True to legend, Milton was impressive in conversations
and seminars with his sharp mind and quick debating skills, but even more
impressive to me were his gregariousness, kindness, and humor. He was
genuinely interested in what people had to say; he respected people. He
always answered letters and e-mails—and you can imagine how many
he got from around the world. He told me that if someone took the time to
write to him with a question that he felt he should find the time to
answer. He was always willing to be a guest lecturer in my Economics 1
course. He would start by telling the undergraduates that two major things
the government is involved in are a mess: education and drugs—and
that would set off a lively round of questions, with his memorable answers
impressing both those on the left and those on the right. He put MV = PY on
his California license plates, a story I always use to help students
remember that famous formula. When I called him from Washington in 1990
during a stint at the Council of Economic Advisers to ask for his support
for the president’s “revenue enhancements” he simply
said, “You better come back to Stanford right away, John. Washington
is corrupting you.” On my more recent stint in Washington I did not
have to ask his support for that kind of policy, and I was pleased to get
his help and support for noninterventionist exchange rate polices, removal
of capital controls in trade agreements, and IMF reform.
One of the best things about returning from
Washington last year was the opportunity for my wife, Allyn, and me to see
more of Milton and Rose, usually in San Francisco, and for me to talk more
with Milton about monetary theory. Last winter Milton wrote a technical
paper on some of my monetary research, which we had been discussing at
length in the previous months. Using data and charts, he demonstrated in a
convincing and sophisticated way that the improvement in economic stability
in the United States in the past 25 years was mostly due to monetary
policy. I assigned the paper to my graduate students. I debated the
technical parts of the paper with Milton, and the debate was televised for
a conference just last August. You do not have to ask who won the debate,
but it was a moment for me with the master that I will never forget.
Special to the Hoover
Digest.
John B. Taylor is the Bowen H. and Janice Arthur McCoy Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution and the Mary and Robert Raymond Professor of Economics at Stanford University. He was previously the director of the Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research and was founding director of Stanford's Introductory Economics Center. He has a long and distinguished record of public service. Among other roles, he served as a member of the President’s Council of Economic Advisors from 1989 to 1991 and as Under Secretary of the Treasury for International Affairs from 2001 to 2005. He is currently a member of the California Governor's Council of Economic Advisors.
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