Some FWers will be interested in the following interview
with Milton Friedman in this FT Weekend Magazine:
<<<<
FT LUNCH WITH MILTON FRIEDMAN
Simon London
Hold on to your hats and prepare to be amazed: Milton Friedman has
changed his mind.
"The use of quantity of money as a target has not been a
success," concedes the grand old man of conservative economics.
"I'm not sure I would as of today push it as hard as I once
did." Granted, this is hardly a conversion of Damascene
significance. But, heck, it's a start. It also shows that, at the age of
91, Friedman still has his critical faculties intact. The man once
described as "the most consequential public intellectual of the
post-war era" is still engaged -- and engaging.
We are at the North Beach Restaurant in San Francisco. While he will be
forever linked with the "Chicago school" of economics, Friedman
and Rose, his wife and sometime co-author, moved to the area in the late
1970s when he retired from teaching.
The restaurant is only a couple of blocks from Friedman's home and, it
transpires, is a regular haunt. He receives a voluble welcome.
Those under the age of 40 are probably unaware how consequential Milton
Friedman has been. His mild recantation on monetary targeting would have
caused a sensation - and perhaps saved a lot of grief -- had it been
uttered 20 years ago. In the early 1980s, both the US and the UK set
interest rates according to Friedman-style targets for money-supply
growth. The common aim was to bring down inflation without the pain of
recession.
The common outcome, however, was partial success. Inflation fell, but at
enormous cost in terms of unemployment.
The fact that central banks the world over have given up trying to
"fine-tune" economies to an imaginary perfect pitch is a
measure of his wider influence. Money-supply targets may have been
replaced by inflation targets - but the Friedman influence remains
strong.
If this was not enough for one lifetime, Milton Friedman the polemicist
has been at least as influential as Milton Friedman the economist. His
championing of small government, low taxes and market forces helped set
the terms of public policy debate through the 1980s and beyond.
It comes as no surprise to find he has strong views about the menu, too.
On Friedman's recommendation, I order sand dabs, a flatfish said to be
something of a house speciality. The professor opts for eggplant and we
agree on two green salads to start, with iced water all round.
Free To Choose, the "personal statement" published with Rose in
1979, closed with the observation that the intellectual climate was
shifting away from collectivism in favour of free market ideology. What
has happened in the 20 years since, I wonder? "The fall of the
Berlin Wall, which occurred 10 years after Free to Choose was completed,
means that support for socialist, collectivist forms of social
organisation has all but disappeared...
"On the other hand, anti-collectivism has not meant anti-big
government. In terms of the attitude towards big government, it is very
hard to say that there has been any improvement. There may have been
backsliding." I point out that government spending fell as a
proportion of national income during the 1990s, reversing a long upward
trend. Surely this was a sign of big government in retreat? More a sign
of political gridlock in Washington, he responds, with President
Clinton's Democrat White House pitched against a Republican-controlled
Congress.
He adds, with an air of disappointment, that spending under George W Bush
is back on an upward trend. "The second President Bush appears to
have inherited the free-spending tendencies of the first," he says
dismissively. What, then, of the tax cuts that the president recently
signed into law? "His insistence on tax cuts is good," he
concedes. "That is the only real way of bringing pressure on
Congress to hold down spending. In my view, the size of government is
determined much more by how much they can raise in taxes than by any
ideological theory." The entrees arrive very, very hot.
"To go back to your original question, the tide of public opinion
has continued to go against government. People are as suspicious as ever
of government - big or small. Unfortunately, the slowness with which
public opinion affects policy has not changed."
His favourite example of the mismatch between public opinion and public
policy is school vouchers. Such a scheme, he says, would unleash market
forces in the education sector by giving parents the right to choose
which school their child attends. Funding would be granted in the first
instance to the child, not the school. Schools would then have to compete
for business by raising standards or pleasing parents in other
ways.
"There is no doubt about public opinion," he says, tucking in
to his eggplant. "Everyone knows that the public school system is
lousy. The solutions proposed are all ineffective with one exception: a
greater degree of parental choice - more competition. The majority of the
American public is in favour of child-centred financing. But the teachers
unions exercise such strong political control that it is very, very
difficult to make any progress."
Listening to him it is easy to understand why his formula appealed to
political leaders -- think Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan -- who
craved black-and-white answers to complex questions. As well as turning
out academic papers and polemics, Friedman in his prime was also a
prolific producer of newspaper articles. One of his most influential
appeared in The New York Times Magazine circa 1970, arguing that business
should keep its nose out of social affairs and concentrate on maximising
returns to shareholders.
"The only responsibility of companies is to make a profit," he
wrote -- providing thousands of future MBA students with an easy starting
point for essays on the topic of corporate purpose.
This is one area, I suggest, in which the tide of opinion has surely
turned against him. Recent scandals involving Enron, WorldCom and others
have added to the interest in "business ethics" started in the
late 1990s amid growing concern about environmental degradation and
globalisation.
Nonetheless, Friedman's passion for shareholder primacy remains
undiminished. The fashionable idea that companies should balance the
needs of shareholders, employees, customers, communities and other
"stakeholders" strikes him as wrong-headed.
"The stakeholder notion is a very dangerous notion. It is a
socialist notion. It says that employees are major stakeholders. It is
really a movement towards employee-run enterprises." But what about
the claim that human capital is as important to businesses as financial
capital? Surely employees -- the providers of human capital - should have
some say in the way businesses are run?
His answer is twofold. First, human capital is not new. The share of
wages and earnings in national income has been remarkably stable through
the decades. Second, the best system of corporate governance is one that
provides the best incentives to use capital efficiently. The
self-interest of employees in retaining their jobs will often conflict
with this overriding objective. Besides, shareholders enjoy none of the
contractual protection enjoyed by employees. Thus, they bear the residual
risk when a company fails.
"You want control... in the hands of those who are the residual
recipients because they are the ones with the direct interest in using
the capital of the firm efficiently. How do you like the sand dabs?"
Sand dabs, it turns outs, are a favourite in the Friedman household.
Rose's sand dabs are unmatched even by the North Beach
Restaurant.
I ask whether he has changed his famously sceptical views about European
monetary union. After all, the euro has been around for a couple of years
and is, as we speak, kicking sand in the face of a weak dollar. Surely
this suggests that the European single currency could be a long-term
success.
"I've been wrong so far, so I don't have too much confidence in my
view. But I think within the next 10 to 15 years the eurozone will split
apart. The British government, on balance, should stay out of it." I
remark that Friedman the economist seems less sure of himself these days
than his polemicist alter ego.
After a long pause, he agrees: "You form a philosophy at a certain
stage and for the rest of your life it dominates. On the big issues of
policy I don't think there is anything I've changed my mind
about."
>>>>
Financial Times 6/7 June, 2003
Keith Hudson, 6 Upper Camden Place, Bath, England
- RE: [Futurework] Freidman has changed his mind Keith Hudson
- RE: [Futurework] Freidman has changed his mind Karen Watters Cole
- Re: [Futurework] Freidman has changed his mind Ray Evans Harrell
- Re: [Futurework] Freidman has changed his mind Ray Evans Harrell
