dmspilot00
Member
- Joined
- Aug 28, 2007
- Messages
- 313
I disagree. Friedman desired to abolish the Federal Reserve, and was the most vocal proponent of freedom, free markets, and limited government in the 20th century. I think he was also the first person to prove the Federal Reserve caused the Great Depression.Freidman is grossly overrated...He defends the existence of the Fed and I believe he's against Gold Standard...
Friedman was just a half way point between Keynes and Von Mise...
.much better than the former....but not nearly as correct as the latter
Friedman used to be a high-tax socialist and Keynesian, but completely reversed his position in the 50s and 60s.The Chicago school, like the Keynesians, use the flawed "perfect competition model" rather than a "market process" approach like we Austrians.
When at the first meeting of the Mt. Pelerin Society, Mises challenged the presence of Friedman calling him the socialist he was (by nature of using the wrong premise--the model of false empiricism), but Hayek let him stay out of personal friendship.
The Chicago School is more similar to the Austrian school than it is to Keynesian. Both Chicago and Austrian schools call for free markets and limited government intervention.
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