MILTON FRIEDMAN

“If you were to ask

me to name the most

creative socio-political

thinker of our age, I

would not hesitate to say

Milton Friedman.”

- Daniel Patrick Moynihan

School vouchers. Legal marijuana. The volunteer Army. Taxes deducted from your paycheck. Floating exchange rates. The Earned Income Tax Credit. All of these commonplace ideas have one thing in common: they were first proposed by Milton Friedman. Far more than an academic economist, Friedman was an innovative policy thinker and tireless cheerleader for his vision of reduced government and expanded markets. His career spanned the major episodes of American history in the twentieth century, from the Great Depression to the end of the Cold War.

I am currently writing an intellectual biography of Friedman, focusing on his place in economics, his political ideas, and the influence of his wife Rose. For a peek at the archive I am using, check out the Collected Works of Milton Friedman, a selection from his papers held at Stanford’s Hoover Institution Library and Archives.


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The first full biography of America’s most renowned economist. Milton Friedman was, alongside John Maynard Keynes, the most influential economist of the twentieth century. His work was instrumental in the turn toward free markets that defined the 1980s, and his full-throated defenses of capitalism and freedom resonated with audiences around the world. It’s no wonder the last decades of the twentieth century have been called “the Age of Friedman”―or that analysts have sought to hold him responsible for both the rising prosperity and the social ills of recent times. In Milton Friedman, the first full biography to employ archival sources, the historian Jennifer Burns tells Friedman’s extraordinary story with the nuance it deserves. She provides lucid and lively context for his groundbreaking work on everything from why dentists earn less than doctors, to the vital importance of the money supply, to inflation and the limits of government planning and stimulus. She traces Friedman’s longstanding collaborations with women, including the economist Anna Schwartz, as well as his complex relationships with powerful figures such as Fed Chair Arthur Burns and Treasury Secretary George Shultz, and his direct interventions in policymaking at the highest levels. Most of all, Burns explores Friedman’s key role in creating a new economic vision and a modern American conservatism. The result is a revelatory biography of America’s first neoliberal―and perhaps its last great conservative.
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Books a million
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