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David Friedman's avatar

1. My father was 5'3"

2. Insofar as there was a moral element to the NYT piece it was the idea that the company executives were stealing from the stockholders, using the stockholders' money to, at best, promote causes the executives favored, at worst buying status for themselves. Consider opera donations.

If the company maximized profits instead the extra money goes to the stockholders who can spend it on what they think are good causes. If the stockholders want someone else to spend their money for good causes they can donate it to a suitable nonprofit.

The economic argument is that the market does a better, although imperfect, job of maximizing welfare than a central planner, and the executive spending the stockholders' money on what he thinks is good is a small scale equivalent of the latter.

3. "They largely rely on statistics from Massachusetts."

Take a look at E.G. West: _Education and the Industrial Revolution_.

4. Private schools might be as propagandist as public schools but they are not all pushing the same ideas. Intellectual diversity is a virtue. A lot of the hostility to home schooling is fueled by the idea that it consists of fundamentalist parents who don't want their kids taught evolution.

If you want to correspond I am at ddfr@daviddfriedman.com

Simon Says's avatar

Didn't get through it all yet, but interesting. One thing that caught my attention, and I'm not an economist so what do I know, is about the great depression and the money stuff; Sometimes I read post-keynesians who complain that the role of the money supply is not considered important enough in economics (or wasn't for a few decades before 2008), and they talk about debt-deflation, also in relation to the great depression (and 2008 financial crash). But so Friedman his position on the role of the money supply is actually pretty similar ? Except he of course beliefs we shouldn't try to control it, but just let it grow by X% and leave it at that? But then, during a debt deflation, would Friedman have suggested pumping massive amounts of money into the economy to keep money supply growth at the same level?

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