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TRIBUTES AND REMEMBRANCES: A Debt of Gratitude
By Russell Roberts
Russell Roberts
I last saw Milton Friedman a few days shy of his 94th
birthday, just a few months ago. I was interviewing Milton for my podcast
series, EconTalk. I hadn’t seen him in over a year and I worried
whether the finest economic communicator of our era would still be Milton
Friedman or just a shadow of his former self.
I planned to talk to him about what I considered his
greatest scholarly work, The Monetary History
of the United States, and his first great work
as a public intellectual, Capitalism and
Freedom. Both books were heretical in their
day, and the ideas in both books, in varying degrees, have since become
part of the mainstream.
When Monetary History was published in 1963, the money supply was on the
fringe of economic policy conversation, even when considering the causes of
inflation. Today, the role of the money supply and central banks is front
and center in creating economic stability and setting the stage for growth,
and everyone, from central bankers to academics, agrees that inflation is
everywhere and always, a monetary phenomenon.
The impact of Capitalism
and Freedom is a little more complicated.
Its defense of individual liberty and limited government is more
intellectually acceptable than it was in 1962 when the book was first
published. Many of the policy proposals in the book have been adopted (the
volunteer army, educational vouchers, flexible exchange rates), while
others that were once unimaginable are now taken seriously (privatized
Social Security, eliminating farm subsidies).
I needn’t have worried about Milton’s
faculties. His mind was clear and lucid and as relentlessly logical as
ever. At 93, he wasn’t as quick as he was in his youth. But who can
match that standard? I recently found an interview from 1975 on YouTube
when he was in his prime. What a prime it was! Articulate, razor-sharp
logic, and always a smile on his face even when his opponent fails to give
him the benefit of the doubt as to his motives. What an inner fire he must
have had to sustain him through all that ridicule and disdain with his
sense of humor intact and his dignity unwavering.
We talked for about an hour—about his books,
his ideas, the state of the world, and the prospects for liberty. At
one point in our conversation, we talked about how a bad idea—the
government’s championing of ethanol—is sustained by the
political power of its prime beneficiary, Archer Daniels Midland. At first,
neither of us could remember the company’s name. We stumbled for a
few seconds and then he started laughing. He had an excuse, he
explained—he was 93. But he thought it delightful that his
interviewer, a lad of only 51, had the same difficulty.
We should all find that our biggest challenge after
we’ve passed 90 is pulling the name of a company from our mental hard
drives.
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What an inner fire Milton must have had to sustain him through all the years of
ridicule and disdain with his sense of humor intact and his dignity unwavering.
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In the course of our discussion about the money
supply and its role in creating the incredible economic performance of the
last 25 years, Milton made a claim about the smoothness of the growth in
the money supply over that time. A week or so later, I e-mailed him, asking
him which measure of the money supply he had in mind. By then, he had
celebrated his 94th birthday. He responded with an e-mail of explanation,
attaching two spreadsheets with the data he thought most relevant. At 94,
Milton was sending me spreadsheets. Unbelievable.
At the end of our time together, standing in the
doorway of his San Francisco home, I thanked him for his time and then I
paused. How many more chances would I have to see him in person down the
road? So I thanked him again, this time for everything, for all that he had
done for me and for all of us who saw him as a guide and mentor and for all
of us whose lives had been touched by his ideas—the people in America
and around the world who live under freedom, with all that that conveys and
allows.
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Several months ago, Milton responded to one of my queries with an e-mail of explanation,
attaching two spreadsheets with the data he thought most relevant. At 94,
Milton was sending me spreadsheets. Unbelievable.
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I felt a little foolish. The words were so
inadequate. But now that he is gone, I’m glad to have at least said
something to let him know how much he meant to us who toil in the vineyards
he planted. We shall not look upon his like again.
This essay was posted on TCS
Daily (www.tcsdaily.com) on December 6,
2006.
Russell Roberts is a research fellow at the Hoover Institution and a professor of economics and the J. Fish and Lillian F. Smith Distinguished Scholar at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University.
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