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#11
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Walt wrote:
Sailing term? You mean "money"? You've been hanging around the keelboat racers too much, Doug. No, it doesn't even start with the same letter. DSK |
#12
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DSK wrote:
Walt wrote: Sailing term? You mean "money"? You've been hanging around the keelboat racers too much, Doug. No, it doesn't even start with the same letter. Huh. That's too bad, since I was going to guess "Mizzen Mast" next. As in "I'm going to assault the International Monetary Fund and their ridiculous fixed exchange rates by belaboring them about the head with the Mizzen Mast." But I guess that would be wrong, and I wouldn't win that glass of root beer with the vanilla ice cream that you promised. I give up. You might say I'm sunk. //Walt |
#13
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![]() "DSK" wrote in message ... "Walt" wrote the debt fairy is coming along any day now? The bad news, he's engaged to the foreign-policy fairy. Gilligan wrote: Why is borrowing money at historically low interest rates so bad? It wouldn't be so bad, if the money were spent on something constructive that offered future returns. Especially if followed by a growth in the money supply that exceeds the increase in the GNP? ??? Increasing the gov't debt has very little to do with increasing the money supply. And the increases in GNP have rather paltry, lately. And this is after starting a war, traditionally a great way to goose a national economy; and eliminating all those pesky environmental regulations, which should also give a boost. What's up with that? Pay the debt with inflated currency. Besides, everybody knows that those darn libby-rull Democrats are the ones who don't know beans about the economy. Now that they're in charge, just LOOK at the deficit! This thread got side tracked somehow. What I started out to say, for 1 ASA/economist point, can anybody answer what economic theory did Friedman produce? 2 points if you can explain it. I don't think he produced any new economic theory but rather contributed deeper understanding and refinement to old ones. DSK |
#14
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Dave wrote:
On Fri, 17 Nov 2006 11:17:46 -0500, DSK said: Well, you're in the right ballpark. Friedman was a monetarist and his thoeries revitalized monetarism (discredited for a long time even after the obvious hint of the Weimar Republic's fiscal undoing). He's been called a Neo-Monetarist. But there is a specifc term (also used in sailing) that is the key to his main monetarist theory, in fact this is what makes the whole thing work. Dunno what magic words you have in mind, but there's a rather nice summary on the Op Ed page of today's Journal. The WSJ? Yeah, well, whatever floats your boat... //Walt |
#15
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Gilligan wrote:
Pay the debt with inflated currency. When the debt is one of the drivers of inflation, how is inflation going to oustrip debt? Isn't this like putting the cart before the horse? This thread got side tracked somehow. What I started out to say, for 1 ASA/economist point, can anybody answer what economic theory did Friedman produce? 2 points if you can explain it. I don't think he produced any new economic theory but rather contributed deeper understanding and refinement to old ones. AFAIK he definitely invented something new, but five or six minutes of googling has failed to produce a reference to it, unless you already know the specific term. DSK |
#16
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.... But there is a specifc term (also used in
sailing) that is the key to his main monetarist theory, in fact this is what makes the whole thing work. Dave wrote: Dunno what magic words you have in mind, but there's a rather nice summary on the Op Ed page of today's Journal. It's just one word. I read some of the Wall St Journal's stuff on Dr. Friedman, but like most people who wax eloquent about the political import of his work, they get the facts of his actual work pretty much backwards. Question- if Milton Friedman the world famous economist was so much in favor of school vouchers, why was he rarely invited to speak on the subject at political functions? Answer: because his definition of what a voucher was, and the importance of universal education, is anathema to those who make "school vouchers" one of the chief causes. DSK |
#17
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he was no Ross Perot.
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#18
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![]() "DSK" wrote in message ... Gilligan wrote: Pay the debt with inflated currency. When the debt is one of the drivers of inflation, how is inflation going to oustrip debt? Isn't this like putting the cart before the horse? Germany in the 1920's. Simply turn on the printing presses and devalue the currency. This thread got side tracked somehow. What I started out to say, for 1 ASA/economist point, can anybody answer what economic theory did Friedman produce? 2 points if you can explain it. I don't think he produced any new economic theory but rather contributed deeper understanding and refinement to old ones. AFAIK he definitely invented something new, but five or six minutes of googling has failed to produce a reference to it, unless you already know the specific term. Don't you know it? He didn't come up with any new theories. He refined old ones. Have you ever read "Human Action" by Ludwig von Mises? He was a founder of the Austrian school of economics, a predecessor of the Chicago school which laid a good deal of the ground work. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ludwig_von_Mises DSK |
#19
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Pay the debt with inflated currency.
When the debt is one of the drivers of inflation, how is inflation going to oustrip debt? Isn't this like putting the cart before the horse? Gilligan wrote: Germany in the 1920's. Simply turn on the printing presses and devalue the currency. Good example. Did it work out in the end? This thread got side tracked somehow. What I started out to say, for 1 ASA/economist point, can anybody answer what economic theory did Friedman produce? 2 points if you can explain it. Gilligan wrote: I don't think he produced any new economic theory but rather contributed deeper understanding and refinement to old ones. DSK wrote: AFAIK he definitely invented something new, but five or six minutes of googling has failed to produce a reference to it, unless you already know the specific term. Gilligan wrote: Don't you know it? Yes: velocity Friedman's work was key in measuring various inputs to the money supply, quantifying the trend in velocity, and stabilizing inflation. He didn't come up with any new theories. He refined old ones. Actually, I thought he did, but with further research (more than I really have time for today) I'm beginning to think you're right. ... Have you ever read "Human Action" by Ludwig von Mises? No have you? .... He was a founder of the Austrian school of economics, a predecessor of the Chicago school which laid a good deal of the ground work. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ludwig_von_Mises Never heard of the man before now. Looks like pretty interesting stuff, thanks for the reference. Just to make sure, I went back to my old textbook, which does indeed say that Milton Friedman invented the concept of velocity, as applied to quantifying the money supply. However, after digging around quite a lot (interesting reading but I have a lot of other things that I should be doing instead right now), I don't think he did invent the concept of velocity. http://www.unc.edu/depts/econ/byrns_...les/fisher.htm In any event, Friedman was the first to reliably use numbers from the real world to show how the money supply related to changes in GNP, employment, and inflation, which is something that economists had pretty much given up on. Dr. Friedman's work... and economic history since... has been the basis of relatively stable economic order; ironically it also shows the desirability of disconnecting monetary policy from political influence, which is something else the neo-conservatives ignore when trumpeting Friedman. OK, back to real work, dammit! DSK |
#20
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![]() "DSK" wrote in message ... Pay the debt with inflated currency. When the debt is one of the drivers of inflation, how is inflation going to oustrip debt? Isn't this like putting the cart before the horse? Gilligan wrote: Germany in the 1920's. Simply turn on the printing presses and devalue the currency. Good example. Did it work out in the end? This thread got side tracked somehow. What I started out to say, for 1 ASA/economist point, can anybody answer what economic theory did Friedman produce? 2 points if you can explain it. Gilligan wrote: I don't think he produced any new economic theory but rather contributed deeper understanding and refinement to old ones. DSK wrote: AFAIK he definitely invented something new, but five or six minutes of googling has failed to produce a reference to it, unless you already know the specific term. Gilligan wrote: Don't you know it? Yes: velocity Friedman's work was key in measuring various inputs to the money supply, quantifying the trend in velocity, and stabilizing inflation. http://www.mises.org/story/918 He didn't come up with any new theories. He refined old ones. Actually, I thought he did, but with further research (more than I really have time for today) I'm beginning to think you're right. ... Have you ever read "Human Action" by Ludwig von Mises? No have you? Yes .... He was a founder of the Austrian school of economics, a predecessor of the Chicago school which laid a good deal of the ground work. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ludwig_von_Mises Never heard of the man before now. Looks like pretty interesting stuff, thanks for the reference. Just to make sure, I went back to my old textbook, which does indeed say that Milton Friedman invented the concept of velocity, as applied to quantifying the money supply. However, after digging around quite a lot (interesting reading but I have a lot of other things that I should be doing instead right now), I don't think he did invent the concept of velocity. http://www.unc.edu/depts/econ/byrns_...les/fisher.htm In any event, Friedman was the first to reliably use numbers from the real world to show how the money supply related to changes in GNP, employment, and inflation, which is something that economists had pretty much given up on. Dr. Friedman's work... and economic history since... has been the basis of relatively stable economic order; ironically it also shows the desirability of disconnecting monetary policy from political influence, which is something else the neo-conservatives ignore when trumpeting Friedman. OK, back to real work, dammit! DSK |
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