Tyler Cowen, Columnist

Milton Friedman Is More Relevant Than Ever

The ideas of the Nobel laureate, who died 15 years ago this week, remain influential not only in economics but also in education and public policy. 

As relevant today as he was the day he won the Nobel in 1976.

Photo by Keystone/Getty Images

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Economists have gotten a lot wrong over the course of this pandemic, and long before that, but there is one whose ideas have never looked better: Milton Friedman, the Nobel laureate who died in 2006.

Friedman’s reputation suffered after the Great Recession, as the market forces he so believed in were at fault. Worse yet, after the financial crisis, the U.S. Federal Reserve expanded the money supply dramatically, but the rate of price inflation remained stubbornly low. Monetarism, the theory he is best known for, appeared irrelevant.