Milton Friedman -- a Living Economic Legend

Even those individuals who consider him to be a negative influence upon economic theory cannot deny the impact of Milton Friedman had in deflating the once-uniform confidence economists invested in Keynesian theories of macroeconomics after Keynes' theories of government spending were credited with ending the Great Depression. Unlike Keynes, who advocated sharp, short-term increases in government spending to ameliorate the effects of a recession, Friedman argued against government intervention in the economy. Friedman claimed that the forces of a free market and the Federal Reserve Bank's gradual, continuous increase in the money supply would promote economic growth and thus counter the dangers of a recession. (Silk, 2005) This was at the heart of Friedman's 1957 contributions to economics, called the "Permanent Income Hypothesis" in consumption, that suggested that the more money existed in the economy, the more individuals were willing to spend, in...
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