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A Giant Of
Economics
Milton Friedman belongs in a list of the most
important and influential people of the last
100 years.
He promoted what were then
new ideas in the 1950's - free markets and
personal liberty. He argued that economic
freedom was good economics and was also
necessary for political freedom. At that time,
remembering the great depression (unemployment
18 per cent), many Americans were suspicious of
free markets.
Friedman's philosophy
influenced many major achievements including
the move by many governments to sell
nationalised industries, the conversion of
China to a market economy, the fall of the
Berlin wall, the successes of Margaret Thatcher
and Ronald Reagan and the conversion of the
Australian economy from a protectionist society
to a prosperous one via the removal of
protectionism, floating of the dollar and
demolishing state ownership.
Many of his ideas have been
adopted and many are still being debated -
school vouchers, negative income tax and a
volunteer army.
He won the Nobel Prize in
1976. His number one huge contribution to
economics was his explanation of the Great
Depression.
At the time it was believed
to be an example of capitalism's inherent
instability. Friedman showed the Federal
Reserve caused the depression through
mistakenly tight money policies that led 40 per
cent of U.S. banks to fail. Friedman's ideas
essentially disputed the ideas of John Maynard
Keynes who relied on fiscal policy (government
spending and taxes) to manage the economy,
whereas Friedman believed monetary policy
(interest rates and the money supply) were the
keys.
Remember that economic slumps
rarely become disasters. Since the late 1940's,
the United States has suffered 10 recessions
-
*
On average, they've lasted 10 months,
and
*
They have averaged peak monthly unemployment of
7.6 per cent,
*
The 1973-75 recession lasted 16 months and had
peak unemployment of 9 per cent, and
*
The worst 1980-81, lasted 16 months and had
peak unemployment of 10.8 per cent.
The U.S. is almost certainly
in a recession now, but joblessness at 6.1 per
cent in September, would have to rise
spectacularly to match those highs.
In the stock market, since
the late 1940s, there have been 10 previous
bear markets (i.e. declines of at least 20 per
cent) as defined by S & P's 500 Index
-
*
The average decline was 31.5 per
cent,
*
Those of 1973-74, 2000-02 and 2007-08 were
nearly 50 per cent.
This compares with the Great
Depression, where by the low point in July
1932, stocks were down almost 90 per cent. Yet,
by 1940, unemployment was still at 15 per cent
and not responding to self-correcting market
mechanisms, nor government policies. At that
time Keynes theories held sway. Friedman
changed all that.
Article Source:
http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Neil_Handley
About the
writer
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Neil Handley graduated as a Bachelor of
Economics and Accountant. After some 20 years
as a stock broker Neil turned to property
development. He then acquired a controlling
interest in a property development company
listed on the stock exchange and became CEO. He
has been involved in developing residential
subdivisions, industrial subdivisions,shopping
centres, office buildings and medium density
residential dwellings in Sydney's north shore,
Northern Districts, Parramatta and Liverpool
areas and on the Gold Coast, Queensland. One
office building was sold to the AMP for $25ml.
Neil's company advises on building wealth via
property.
Go to
http://www.specialstrategies.com
.
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