A Monetary History of the United States: Difference between revisions

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*[[Milton Friedman]] and [[Anna Schwartz]]’s monumental ''Monetary History of the United States'' eventually helped to displace [[Keynesian]] interpretations with a monetarist interpretation, especially after the [[stagflation]] of the 1970s worked to discredit Keynesian [[macroeconomics]].
*[[Milton Friedman]] and [[Anna Schwartz]]’s monumental ''Monetary History of the United States'' eventually helped to displace [[Keynesian]] interpretations with a monetarist interpretation, especially after the [[stagflation]] of the 1970s worked to discredit Keynesian [[macroeconomics]].
**[[Robert Higgs]], "[http://blog.independent.org/2011/01/24/debating-the-great-depression-steve-horwitz’s-latest-contribution/ Debating the Great Depression: Steve Horwitz’s Latest Contribution]," ''The Beacon'' (Independent Institute, 24 January 2011).
**[[Robert Higgs]], "[http://blog.independent.org/2011/01/24/debating-the-great-depression-steve-horwitz’s-latest-contribution/ Debating the Great Depression: Steve Horwitz’s Latest Contribution]," ''The Beacon'' (Independent Institute, 24 January 2011).

* I frequently tell students: If you buy only one economics book, it should be ''A Monetary History''. The book is obviously important for our understanding of the Great Depression, but its impact goes far beyond that. Friedman and Schwartz show us that monetary events and monetary policy have affected real output throughout American history.
** [[Christina Romer]], [http://fivebooks.com/interviews/christina-romer-on-learning-great-depression An interview with... Christina Romer on Learning from the Great Depression]


== External links ==
== External links ==

Revision as of 00:49, 21 September 2015

A Monetary History of the United States, 1867–1960 is a book written in 1963 by Nobel Prize–winning economist Milton Friedman and Anna J. Schwartz.

Quotes about A Monetary History of the United States

  • Friedman and Schwartz claimed that the fall in the money supply turned what might have been an ordinary recession into a catastrophic depression, itself an arguable point. But even if we grant that point for the sake of argument, one has to ask whether the Federal Reserve, which after all did increase the monetary base, can be said to have caused the fall in the overall money supply. At least initially, Friedman and Schwartz didn’t say that. What they said instead was that the Fed could have prevented the fall in the money supply, in particular by riding to the rescue of the failing banks during the crisis of 1930–1931. If the Fed had rushed to lend money to banks in trouble, the wave of bank failures might have been prevented, which in turn might have avoided both the public’s decision to hold cash rather than bank deposits, and the preference of the surviving banks for stashing deposits in their vaults rather than lending the funds out. And this, in turn, might have staved off the worst of the Depression.
    An analogy may be helpful here. Suppose that a flu epidemic breaks out, and later analysis suggests that appropriate action by the Centers for Disease Control could have contained the epidemic. It would be fair to blame government officials for failing to take appropriate action. But it would be quite a stretch to say that the government caused the epidemic, or to use the CDC’s failure as a demonstration of the superiority of free markets over big government.
    Yet many economists, and even more lay readers, have taken Friedman and Schwartz’s account to mean that the Federal Reserve actually caused the Great Depression—that the Depression is in some sense a demonstration of the evils of an excessively interventionist government. And in later years, as I’ve said, Friedman’s assertions grew cruder, as if to feed this misperception. In his 1967 presidential address he declared that “the US monetary authorities followed highly deflationary policies,” and that the money supply fell “because the Federal Reserve System forced or permitted a sharp reduction in the monetary base, because it failed to exercise the responsibilities assigned to it”—an odd assertion given that the monetary base, as we’ve seen, actually rose as the money supply was falling. (Friedman may have been referring to a couple of episodes along the way in which the monetary base fell modestly for brief periods, but even so his statement was highly misleading at best.)
    • Paul Krugman, "Who Was Milton Friedman?", The New York Review of Books (February 15, 2007)
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