cover image: Book Review: Milton Friedman: The Last Conservative

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Book Review: Milton Friedman: The Last Conservative

26 Jun 2024

Fans of economist Milton Friedman--of whom I'm one--should count themselves lucky that Stanford historian Jennifer Burns has written a detailed biography of him. Based on intensive archival research that only a patient, first- rate historian can do, she covers his intellectual life in its various stages from his time in high school to his death. Along the way, we see how he struggled in the 1930s and even, to some extent, in the 1940s to figure out his role in academia. Burns also shows in great detail the important influences in his life and, later, the many ways he has influenced the economics profession and the bigger world of policy--on taxes, monetary policy, welfare policy, and the draft, to name four of the most important. Her book is by no means a hagiography. At various points, she criticizes Friedman, sometimes unfairly. She's also a little unfair to his wife, Rose Friedman, an economist in her own right. But that makes Burns's many positive evaluations of Milton's work all the more credible.

Authors

David R. Henderson

Published in
United States of America