Milton Friedman, 19122006
by
Hans F. Sennholz
by Hans F. Sennholz
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Few
American economists have wielded as much influence on economic thought
and policy as the late Milton Friedman. He was an articulate and
ardent advocate of free markets and personal liberty. In 1962, his
Capitalism
and Freedom, which continues to be in print with nearly
one million copies sold, pointed the way not only to economic but
also political freedom. A year later his Monetary
History of the United States, 18671960, co-authored
with Anna Schwartz, cast a new light on the Great Depression and
the policies that caused it. He was a passionate critic of all versions
of socialism and a fervent censor of Keynesian economics which stands
as the most influential economic formulation of the 20th century.
One of the most prolific writers of his time, Professor Friedman
wrote many pertinent economic columns in Newsweek. His outstanding
achievements earned him the Nobel Prize in 1976.
It may be
folly to criticize and censure a famous author whom all the world
admires. Yet this economist has been at odds with Professor Friedman
ever since he advanced his monetarist thought. It is strange that
Professor Friedman and his fellow monetarists, who are such defenders
of the market order, should call on politicians and bureaucrats
to provide the most important economic good money. Granted,
monetarists do not trust them with discretionary powers, which led
Friedman to write a detailed prescription, a Constitutional Amendment;
however, the Constitution is supreme force, backed by courts and
police. The amendment is a political formula to be adopted by political
authorities and, when enacted, a constitutional prohibition of monetary
freedom.
The Amendment
calls for issue of government money in the form of non-interest
bearing obligations which would not alter the nature of currency
expansion, it merely would change its technique. The stock of these
obligations is supposed to grow, year after year, without any obligation
to repay, which changes their nature from being obligations
to being mere government paper. The Friedman proposal would merely
simplify the technique of money issue; instead of the Federal Reserve
creating and lending its funds to the U.S. Treasury, earning an
interest thereon and then returning the interest to the Treasury
as miscellaneous receipts, Friedman would have the Treasury
issue non-interest bearing U.S. notes. This would save the U.S.
Treasury the interest it is now paying, and eliminate the miscellaneous
receipts the Treasury is now receiving.
In its search
for stability, the Friedman amendment, unfortunately, proceeds on
the old road to nowhere. There is no absolute monetary stability,
never has been, and never can be. Economic life is a process of
perpetual change. People continually choose among alternatives,
attaching ever-changing values to economic goods; therefore, the
exchange ratios of their goods are forever adjusting. Economists
searching for absolute stability and measurement are searching in
vain, and they become disruptive and potentially harmful to the
economic well-being of society when they call upon government to
apply its force to achieve the unattainable.
Money is no
yardstick of prices. It is subject to mans valuations and
actions in the same way that all other economic goods are. Its subjective,
as well as objective, exchange values continually fluctuate and,
in turn, affect the exchange ratios of other goods at different
times and to different extents. There is no true stability of money,
whether it is fiat or commodity money. There is no fixed point or
relationship in economic exchange. Yet, despite this inherent instability
of economic value and purchasing power, man is forever searching
for a dependable medium of exchange.
The precious
metals have served him well throughout the ages. Because of their
natural qualities and their relative scarcity, both gold and silver
were dependable media of exchange. They were marketable goods that
gradually gained universal acceptance and employment in exchanges.
They even could be used to serve as tools of economic calculation
because their quantities changed very slowly over time. This kept
changes in their purchasing power at rates that could be disregarded
in business accounting and bookkeeping. In this sense, we may speak
of an accounting stability that permits acting man to compare the
countless objects of his economic concern.
Contrary to
monetarist doctrine, an expansion of the money stock of three to
five percent suffices to generate the business cycle. Economic booms
and busts occur in every case of fiat expansion, whether the expansion
is one percent or hundreds of percents. The magnitude of expansion
does not negate its effects; it merely determines the severity of
the maladjustment and necessary readjustment.
Monetarists
are quick to proclaim that business recessions in general, and the
Great Depression in particular, are the result of monetary contraction.
Mistaking symptoms for causes, they prescribe policies that treat
the symptoms; however, the prescription, which is reinflation, tends
to aggravate the maladjustments and delay the necessary readjustment.
The Friedman
amendment, unfortunately, would cause the same economic and social
conflicts as the present fiat system. It would create income and
wealth with the stroke of a pen, and then distribute the booty to
a long line of eager beneficiaries. The amendment would fix the
quantity of issue, but the mode of its distribution, which confers
favors and assigns losses, would be left to the discretion of the
monetary authorities. It would enmesh them in ugly political battles
about credit redistribution, which soon would spill
over to the halls of Congress, just as it does today.
The monetarists
actually have no business cycle theory, merely a prescription for
government to hold it steady. From Irving Fisher to
Milton Friedman the antidote for depressions has always been the
same: reinflation. The central banker who permits credit contraction
is the culprit of it all. If there is a recession, he must issue
more money, and if there is inflation, that is, rising price levels,
he must slow the increase in the supply of money, but increase it
nevertheless.
Professor
Friedman himself seems to have been aware of his lack of business
cycle theory when he admitted little confidence in our knowledge
of the transmission mechanism. He had no engineering
blueprint, but merely an impressionistic representation
that monetary changes are the key to major movements in money
income. His gap hypothesis, therefore, is designed
to fill the gap of theory and allow for the time it takes for all
adjustments to be corrected. He seeks to time the recession without
explaining it.
The
increasing importance of government obligations as bank assets gives
great confidence to monetarists; however, it creates anxiety because
government obligations merely are receipts for money spent and savings
consumed. Every budgetary deficit that creates more government obligations
consumes productive capital and thereby hampers economic production.
The growing importance of government obligations in bank portfolios
actually signals government consumption of economic substance and
wealth. To commercial banks, it means the loss of real property
securing the loans, and the addition of yet more government promises
to tax, print and pay. A banking system built primarily on government
IOUs is in a precarious condition.
What
Professor Friedman called the dethroning of gold was,
in truth, the default of central banks to make good on their legal
and contractual obligations. Following the example set by the United
States on August 15, 1971, central banks all defaulted in their
duty to redeem their currencies in gold. The default, unfortunately,
did not bring stability and prosperity; it opened the gates for
world-wide inflation. It made the U.S. dollar the world currency,
elevated the Federal Reserve System to the world central bank, and
inundated the world with U.S. dollars. (Cf. My Money and Freedom,
Libertarian Press, 1985.)
December
7, 2006
Dr.
Hans F. Sennholz [send him mail]
was professor and chairman of the department of economics at Grove
City College. See his website.
Copyright
2006 Hans F. Sennholz
Hans
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