 Hello everyone and welcome back to Conversations with Tyler. Today I'm honored to be talking with Jennifer Burns, who is a history professor at Stanford University. She has a new book out which I just loved. It is called Milton Friedman, The Last Conservative, and her earlier book I also like very much. That is Goddess of the Market, Ein Rand and the American Right. Jennifer, welcome. Thanks so much for having me. I'm really looking forward to our conversation. There's so much Milton Friedman one can read. There's a reasonable amount of him on YouTube. Overall, how did writing this book cause you to reassess Friedman? What's the delta? That's a great question. I came in really interested in him as the public figure, the YouTuber as it were, and over time I got more interested in him as the economist. So I think I came to understand how much that public Friedman was the tip of the iceberg on just a much bigger base of inquiry, research, thinking, not just in economics, but in many dimensions of economics. So I think that was one thing. I hadn't fully appreciated Friedman, the economist. And then I would think as time went on, one thing I came more to appreciate was the way he had both a very consistent message and some change in development in his thought. So the kind of dynamism and stability at the same time. Now Friedman's earliest work on math and statistics, why was that important and when was that? So Friedman, very early in his life, was sort of choosing between the field of mathematics and the field of economics. And when he came into economics, it was really transitioning away from political economy, which was rooted in 19th century philosophy, ethics, considerations of government to a more quantitative field. That shift would happen around Friedman. And what was important is that he was there on the ground floor of that in the 1930s. He was trained by some of the most preeminent mathematical economists of his generation at Columbia, not necessarily at Chicago. And over time, he came to reject that approach. This is something not a lot of people, particularly economists, know about Friedman, but it was significant that he rejected it not out of ignorance, but from a position of understanding mathematical economics, having actually made his mark early in his career with several papers, and then deciding that intellectually this was unsatisfying and this was not providing him with the portrait of the world, that he thought economics could reveal, if done the way that he ultimately did it. And his early work on stats, that's still cited by mathematicians, right? Yeah, there's something called the Friedman test, which is still included in software packages. So a lot of that happened. So one, he was there in the first era of mathematical economics. He was also there on the ground of really the first era of big data. So during the Great Depression, the government was struggling to understand what had gone wrong and how to fix it. And one approach they took was to gather as much data as they possibly could on consumption. What are ordinary Americans buying, spending? So they ended up with millions of punch carts, right? They had this very rudimentary technology. And Friedman was one of the analysts hired by the federal government in the mid-30s to figure this information out, basically to process this data. And so as he grappled with that in his work-a-day life, he came up with a couple of statistical... I mean, shortcuts is to be a bit flippant, it's to enable you to get through data very quickly. And those became important papers. He also had a second discovery that I talk about in the book when he was working at the Statistical Research Group, which was a secret wartime agency. And this was a similar task in that they were given a problem by the Army that said, basically, how can we know if our munitions work? How can we test them more efficiently given that we're fighting the biggest war we've ever fought in three different fronts? And so he came up with what he called the super-colossal test. And he was able to conceptualize it and design it, but he wasn't able to prove it mathematically because although he was a skilled mathematician, he said, I'm just... I'm not there. I need to be... I need a little bit of a better mathematician. So he ended up bringing in Abraham Wald to finalize the results of the idea they had come up with, and this became known as sequential analysis. And ended up being a huge boon to the U.S. military in terms of enabling them to test their ordinance and move forward. So it's fascinating in terms of Friedman's later life. His earlier career, his intellectual discoveries are very much embedded in a growing federal government that's growing because of the Great Depression, that's growing because of World War II. And this is what enables him to develop that statistical prowess. It gives him a very strong reputation in the field of economics. But what's interesting is, you know, within five years of that, he's turning his back on those techniques and methods and saying this isn't applicable to understanding human economic behavior. These mathematical models and statistical techniques, these aren't enough. So what's the when and how of Friedman starting to become some glimmer of, say, the Milton Friedman of the 70s and 80s? What leads him to make the shift and decide, well, I'm going to be some version of America's leading public intellectual and take on this heroic role, change the world and everything else? I think he had opportunities to do that throughout his life, some of which he took and some of which he passed on. But I would say he had a model of that very young in his life when he was a graduate student in the figure of Henry Simons, who was one of these forgotten figures in the history of economics who I became absolutely fascinated by. And Henry Simons had a book that was sort of a big deal in the 1930s, it was called A Positive Program for Laissez-Faire. And it was an effort to talk about principles of liberalism, what we would call classical liberalism, and apply them in the New Deal context and use them to critique the New Deal. And then Simons became very actively involved in promoting what was called the Chicago Plan, which was a monetary solution to the Great Depression. It would have been a radical reformulation of the banking sector. And Simons had friends in high places, was kind of pushing this through the political system. So I think that was an early model for Friedman. At the same time, about the 1950s, at one point he was offered a birth on Eisenhower's Council of Economic Advisors. And he said, no. He basically wanted to do his work at the University of Chicago. At that point it didn't feel done. He didn't want to step into the public realm. So I think he was always paying attention, always thinking about it. It's really with his connection to Barry Goldwater that he has the first phase of being a public intellectual and that also comes after he's completed with Anna Schwartz, his magnum opus, a monetary history of the United States. So I think he was both strategic and deliberate and that he wanted to do his major scientific work before he stepped into the public realm. And so there's kind of two phases of him as a public intellectual. There's the 60s to the 70s, and then there's the post-Nobel Prize when he's retired. And then he is still out there, but that's when he's on Donahue and has more of a presence in the Republican establishment. There's a letter you cite from Wesley Clair Mitchell. Maybe it's from 1947 where Mitchell basically says, well, Friedman is too dogmatic. He did this study of incomes of the medical profession and we can't really trust it because he's looking for a particular conclusion. What do you make of that account for Mitchell? Was Mitchell himself biased? Friedman was just flat outright. Friedman was too dogmatic. What do you think? Yeah, you know, I think about this a lot because so that's an episode. I found this letter very just startling and I include quite a bit of it in the book when yeah, Mitchell says to Burns, you know, Friedman to Arthur Burns. This is Arthur Burns, yeah. Right. So Arthur Burns wanted to hire Friedman on the National Bureau of Economic Research and Wesley Mitchell basically said, no, he said he can't be trusted. Not in that he lacks integrity but that he's so committed to what he wants to see that he will selectively interpret the data. And it's interesting because I see in his letters with him in Schwartz, at one point he says to her, you know, we didn't just go and take a bunch of monetary statistics to see what we wanted to see. We had a hypothesis about what we would see and we went in and gathered data to test that hypothesis. And as I was reading this, I was thinking, you know, he doesn't have a consciousness of what we would call, you know, selective reading or bias or selective recognition of facts to fit a preexisting. I don't think that was part of his, he didn't see that as a pitfall or a problem. On the other hand, he does say in some of his later work, look, everyone has a point of view. Everyone comes from a place. There's, you know, it's, it's, I wouldn't say it's radical perspectivalism but it's an awareness that you stand somewhere and we can't get away from this. So therefore we just have to proceed anyhow. So I think he truly believed he was testing to the best of his ability, his priors, and he believed that he was willing to revise them. So I think in some cases he was, in other cases, what he found matched his priors. I don't think that invalidates his whole intellectual project, but I think it's interesting his level of confidence in his ability to, you know, to evaluate his own thinking. At the same time, I also think that, I mean, that is one way to do science, right? You have a hypothesis. You go in with a hypothesis and you see if it's true. So, so that was very much how he operated. Putting aside co-authored works, how do you understand Rose Friedman, his wife, to have influenced Milton's career? Putting aside co-authored works. The deep psychological way in which this all fits together. Clearly they wrote things together. You mentioned she shaped or maybe even edited a lot of his Newsweek columns. But at the margin, was she telling Milton, be more out there or retreat to your academic life or what's she doing in the store? So she was definitely telling him to be more out there. I don't think we'd have Milton the public intellectual without Rose and that is specifically putting together capitalism and freedom. I was never able to untangle exactly what she did because that portion of the archive is missing, I think not coincidentally. But both of them said she's the one who put this book together. Like she went into the notes and made it into a book. I don't think he would have done that. She and his son David also convinced him to do Newsweek. They said, you owe it to yourself, to the country. You got to do this. They've really pushed him. So I think he would not have been so prominent in the public eye without her. And I think there's other contributions just allowing him to be really singularly focused on his work because she took care of everything else. How else did David Friedman, Milton's son, influence him? So as far as I can tell, David was an important connection for Milton Friedman to this sort of student libertarian movement that coalesced really around ending the draft. But David was involved in conservative student organizations at Harvard and then at Chicago where he was a graduate student. So Friedman always had a connection to those communities. There's sometimes, I forget exactly where, but I've seen some libertarian material from the 70s where like David convinced Friedman to do an interview or call into a conference. And for libertarians in the 60s, late 60s and 70s, Friedman was a bit of a court intellectual. He was too statist for their tastes, but he stayed engaged with them. I think David was kind of the conduit. David at that point was much more of an anarcho-capitalist than his father. So I think he helped the elder Friedman sort of keep his pulse on what was happening with a younger and more radical student movement. What was Milton's courtship of Rose Friedman like? It started because of their names. It was originally Rose Director and Milton Friedman. So they were seated next to each other in class. And so it was very much a study buddy thing at first. I think Milton always had his eye on Rose. Rose was like the only woman in a class of, you know, 30-some economists. So she had, I'm sure, more than one suitor, although she doesn't go into any detail in this. And so they studied together. They spent time together. And there's an anecdote I recount in the book where at the end of their first year in graduate school, you know, as they were getting ready to depart for the summer, Milton tried to kiss Rose and she sort of rebuffed him. And then they were apart for a year. And when they came back together, things had changed. And she was ready to, you know, be in a relationship with him. So then they were in a, you know, sextet of couples who spent all their time together. There's then a period where it kind of seems unclear, like what is going to happen next? And I don't think that Milton Friedman ever seriously had another girlfriend or considered another partner and same for Rose, but it was the 1930s. Economic prospects were slim and it was very much, you know, a cultural moray that a man had to be able to support his wife and children before he would consider marriage. So there's a couple year period where they're still together and Rose is thinking they're about to get married and Milton is not so sure. And I think at some point, like his friends were like, what are you doing? Just why is up and marry her? And at some point, she kind of called his bluff and said, look, we have to get married. And they did. So I don't think there was any ever any question of the love. I think it was just, there was some hesitation because of their economic fortunes. How is it that you read their joint memoir Two Lucky People? I mean, is the title jesting like they were lucky? When I read the book, I was surprised how bored I was. And I wasn't sure, well, they did this because they wanted to like manicure the story, which is super upright to begin with, to be clear, as I think you would agree. Or is it actually how they approach things? Like when I read Quine's memoir, I was super bored and I concluded tentatively, well, maybe Quine was just boring, right? How do you think about this? Yeah, I mean, yes. Many people, even those who love Milton Friedman, find this not a very compelling read. It's more of a travelogue. I read it as a book that's fundamentally generous in that everybody was someone they enjoyed, the conversations were spirited, the arguments were friendly, which is simply not very accurate to how their life was lived, and I'll provide an anecdote about that. Though I think of it, this is a couple in their 90s that's had a good life. They're looking back. They're reflecting. They're not trying to settle scores. They're trying to put the most positive spin on anything possible. So I think it's generous in that spirit, but it's not very accurate. And so after a while, I realized the biggest person that I was writing against in my biography was not another biographer, but it was two lucky people. Like that was the text that everybody had in mind that was just simply not accurate in many ways. So I'll tell you two ways that I see it as being inaccurate. One is Friedman recounts an episode of him testifying to Congress, and he says, I had no, and this is in the early 1940s, I had no idea how Keynesian I was. And there's been maybe five to 10 books and articles that have jumped off that to say, well, Milton Friedman was once a Keynesian and then he had some type of conversion. And I just, I do not see that in any of the record I've looked at. And I go into some detail both in the text and more detail in the footnotes about why I don't think this is accurate. And it's, you know, Friedman's looking at his congressional testimony, who reads it in five minutes and says, oh, this sounds Keynesian, you know, from his vantage point in the 90s. So it's not an accurate depiction of his views or of his location in American economics in the 1940s, but it's taken as gospel because he said it. The other thing I would say, I talk about this in some detail as well. In the 1950s, there was a large conflict at the University of Chicago between Friedman and a group associated with the economics department, the Cowles Commission. And that was actually a group of mathematical economists, many leftists in nature, and Friedman didn't like their economics and he didn't like their politics. He basically extended turf war. And, you know, they mentioned this briefly, but when you dig down a little bit more, so they mentioned Charlene Cootman's, who's the leader of Cowles at that point. And, you know, it's kind of along the lines of spirited discussion, some conflict. In reality, there's accounts that indicate Cootman's went through a sort of mental breakdown as part of his conflict with Friedman and had to take time away from the university, had to go to like a music camp to rest his mind. And, you know, Friedman was successful in getting their Rockefeller grant canceled, basically cutting off their funding sources. And you wouldn't, you would know there was conflict, but you wouldn't know that it was very intense and dark conflict and you don't see that in the memoir. Which, again, maybe to his credit, he's trying not to exhume all the negative things he did, but he's kind of glossing over how intense. This was like academic street fighting. It really was. I'm struck by your portrait of the profession in the 40s and 50s, how petty it was, how much people would hold up dissertations, how much individual personalities probably mattered more than they do now. I mean, is that the impression you have of the work you did on that time? It just sounds horrible. And you think like, oh, things have gotten worse, but actually maybe they've gotten better. You know, it was a professionalizing, it was professionalizing, economics was professionalizing. So in the absence of strong professional norms, there was a lot of room for personality, for prejudice, for all this sort of thing. You know, so there's several economists who were hired without dissertations, you know, and you could be hired and have a good career without actually finishing your dissertation, you know, which is completely unheard of today. And then the story I go into in some detail involves them on a Schwartz and how the Columbia faculty simply would not give her a PhD. They just wouldn't do it. They could not be convinced that she deserved a PhD. It's very clearly sexism at work. And it really took Friedman, had to put his foot down and really chew some people out before they decided to give her the degree. So yes, I think in the absence of professional norms, there's a lot more room for power plays, for unfairness, for prejudice. That said, I think the professional norms can get too rigid to the point where you cultivate group think and you close out the possibility of new perspectives, new ideas, new paths. So this was definitely a moment of formation. How do you think about all the work Milton did with women and the Schwartz most of all, but his ideas on consumption, from several women researchers, that was unusual back then. Obviously the work with Rose, is he in your mind a proto-feminist or this is coincidence or what was it for him? Sort of neither. I think you wouldn't have Milton Friedman without these women and sometimes I give a talk called Milton Friedman was a woman because I think if you pulled all the women out of his life you'd have a good economist. I don't know that you'd have a great economist. I don't think you would because they did several things. What they really did was provided a counterpoint to his natural inclinations. So take a monetary history. This would not really have been a narrative or a history. It would have been a bunch of charts and graphs about the money supply. It would have been closer to say Kuznet's studies of national income. And so it's really Schwartz that has a love for history that puts it into a narrative that convinces him to make it a much longer story. And that's why that book resonates because it's not just data. It's a narrative. It's a story. When it comes to the consumption theory of the consumption function he was basically drawing on the women's world of consumption economics which was something that had been a big part of the field but because of this professional process which also was driven by men. So there was this sort of machismo to it. A lot of men had turned away from consumption economics and since Friedman had not he had sort of an advantage. He was digging where everyone was zagging. Now why was Friedman able to do this? Was he more enlightened than other economists of his day? I would say both yes and no. So there's definitely... I had some anecdotes and stories that he was not feminist in his behavior. On the other hand, compared to economists of his day he very much was. Any letter that mentioned anything negative about any of his collaborators as women I think that's not true for other economists. There are some cases I think at Samuelson who will write letters supposedly in support of his female students that turn out to actually be very negative and sort of very sexist in tone. I tended to think that Friedman had a way of sort of missing some social cues and social norms in ways that could be detrimental. I think when it came to the women working with him he had an ability that maybe others didn't to sort of see the person before he saw the woman. And so if it was a very smart woman he would sort of recognize first and foremost that this was a smart woman and secondly kind of register that this was a woman and then maybe that would come with some of supposed limitations. But he really was generous and supportive of the women in his life as intellectuals. And I think that's like his secret sauce because no one else is really doing it at the time and so it gives him new perspectives. I mean when you look at his work he was cited for in the Nobel Prize, most of it has a major woman collaborate. It's a monetary history theory of the consumption function. There's a third which isn't coming to mind but those two would not have been done without a female collaborator. And I knew nothing about this when I started and I was like this is strange. I also think it's why he wrote books. He wouldn't have written books without these collaborators and I think books still are very, very powerful. Even in a field that's moving towards papers books retain their power. Why did Friedman oppose the courtesy appointment of Hayek in the economics department at Chicago? I don't have a ton of information about that because one of the interesting things that happens right when you would think Friedman and Hayek's relationship is the most important. So Hayek comes, I believe it's basically 1950 to 1960 he's at Chicago. So right when he arrives at Chicago you lose the paper trail because now he's there and so there's not a lot of discussion. My sense is that he didn't consider Hayek an economist because he wasn't empirical enough. So when Friedman turned away from mathematical economics he was turning away from theoretical models. He wasn't turning away from data per se and he really believed you had to have theory which for him was price theory. Empirics such as his collaborators gathered through the study of consumption and you had to test that theory with the empirics and so he saw Hayek although Hayek really did influence and teach him intellectually I would say he saw him not as a proper economist because he wasn't doing that empirical research he wasn't trying to test his theories with empirical data sets. I don't think he wanted Hayek training graduate students he was happy to put Hayek on the syllabus happy to have him teaching seminars very involved with him in the broader intellectual endeavors but I think he had an idea of what and how economics should be and Hayek didn't fit into that at that point. How is it you think that Friedman's influence different in Britain compared to the United States? How did it differ in Britain? I see every country has its own version of Milton Friedman they're all a bit inaccurate but he had influence in many places how is Britain different? Well I think Britain had one had had a sort of pre-existing set of ideas that was called monetarism which actually wasn't Friedman inspired but linked up with him very closely I think Friedman actually he had sort of more and less influence I think the presidential lecture he gave in 1967 saying there wasn't a long run tradeoff between inflation and unemployment there's definitely several key figures in the British political establishment who found that that made a big impact on their thinking because they felt like they were living that you know we've been trying to spend money to bring down unemployment and now we've spent all this money and unemployment is still going up and inflation is going up and so in a lot of ways Friedman seemed to be explaining what was happening in Britain and it happened sooner on the other hand he also became a sort of symbolic figure very quickly in British politics both because the British monetary system is different it was different at that time so his advice wasn't technically suitable in many ways and secondly he became a much more prominent figure after the Nobel Prize and after his controversy over his connection to the Pinochet regime in Chile so he then became a sort of whipping boy of left and right so he does have one a substantive intellectual impact and two a symbolic impact you know I don't think his celebrations of individual freedom maybe have the same cultural resonance in Britain as they do in the United States I think in the United States he's in some ways tapping into the kind of rugged individualism frontier spirit were Americans and were free he's got more of that to play with than I think he did have in Britain so you don't see capitalism and freedom you know falling off people's lips in the same way in England as it did in the United States you know there's a debate in one of the episodes of Free to Choose where Peter Jay who is British takes on Milton Friedman I don't know if you remember this and Jay says well Milton you're always inconsistent you cite utility when you want to make an argument but when utility is not on your side you switch back to liberty which is it which one is your master was Peter Jay right was Milton wrong what's your view I love that exchange because if you recollect Peter Jay keeps pushing and pushing and finally Friedman says I think this is verbatim freedom is my God and I was like wow like freedom is your God you know I expected the lightning bolt to come down I mean it was very intense but I think that is ultimately it and so I think Friedman didn't want to believe you had to choose between freedom and greater prosperity you know between an unregulated economy and widespread differentials of wealth he really didn't want to make that choice because one freedom was his God and two he was not an egalitarian but he definitely was concerned about those who had less and he wanted there to be fewer poor people and so he didn't really want to confront that tension he spent a lot of time trying to massage it I think that's where the his interest in what we call UBI comes from but the other thing I really do want to stress is in his era it looked plausible that you didn't have to choose in other words it's the era of the sort of convergence of incomes it's the era where as countries develop economically their income inequality goes down and so he's seeing a very different set of figures than we look at today and as a result he was much more optimistic that the more capitalism spread the more inequality would decline the better off everybody would be and he really didn't wrestle very much although he started to a bit at the end of his life with the conundrum what if capitalism spreads and things get worse for a lot of people what do I do then You mentioned Friedman and Chile what's the bottom line on that whole episode in your opinion I think in most of it it was manufactured as a campaign against Friedman because I think ultimately his impact was similar to what any western trained economist would have had and he was not the architect of the junta he was not particularly connected to Pinochet he came in after an economic catastrophe and prescribed what pretty much any western trained economist would have prescribed to stop inflation and he was then tagged as the sort of architect and western endorser of the regime which was not the case but I think he came to stand in for people's discomfort with the idea that the Nixon administration had perhaps supported the coup and I think there's another piece of it is that the dream of Allende was there could be a peaceful road to socialism and the coup seemed to suggest that that was not true that the peaceful road to socialism could not happen and so if the coup was not inevitable because it was manufactured by western economists and western governments then perhaps we could get back on the Via Celena and make our way to the peaceful redistribution of property and power and the success of a socialist government so I think he got really tangled up in all these questions about is it possible to have a peaceful transition to a socialist or communist government and making Friedman the problem enabled you to focus on Friedman or Nixon rather than the very real problems created by the Allende government in Chile. You used the word prescribed but just physically, literally, what did he do? Oh yeah, I can talk about that for sure and he actually didn't do that much which is interesting so I'll get a little bit granular basically Pinochet takes over from a country where the state sector has expanded dramatically and inflation is I think it's almost 600%, it could be wrong it's hundreds of percent it makes our stress about 6% inflation really puts it in perspective so when the junta comes in they basically keep doing everything they've been doing in terms of state control of the economy they reprivatize a little bit but they don't really know what to do they say that the socialist governor of the mine is replaced by a military governor of the mine and then nothing is improving economically so it's about a year, a year and a half in there's a changing of the guard internally in the Chilean regime and a group of economists several of who did have Chicago training basically are able to get the ear of the dictator and say look we need to do things differently we need to reprivatize, we need to open markets we need to reprivatize we need to open markets to international trade we need to do all this stuff and Pinochet basically says okay let's do it and it's at that point that they're like let's bring in Milton Friedman so then Friedman comes in the policy has been decided and basically his role is to speak to what I kind of jokingly call the Chilean deep state he goes around and he meets with all of the military functionaries who will carry out these policies and he explains in his very lucid way here's why this is the right medicine for Chile he does interviews, he meets a lot of different people he meets Pinochet very briefly and he tells him you have to cut spending to cut inflation and he also reportedly says according to someone who's in the meeting with people, economic freedom eventually it's going to mean political freedom and apparently Pinochet's like yeah, whatever sure what I found in the records that I read the big question that everyone had for Friedman was this is going to be too painful we can't do this this is going to hurt too many people so even in the military regime they are worried if we cut all the state supports that have been created and we try to stop printing money this is going to cause a huge amount of economic pain and so Friedman's sort of like a broken record like yes, but you have to do this and the quicker you do it, the quicker it'll be over cut the spending provide emergency economic support and you'll get through it and basically he uses a metaphor cutting off a dog's tail sort of a horrific metaphor but he says you've got to do it all at once you can't drag it out so I would say his function is to certify a policy change that has already happened and so he's basically like a big name flown in to tell everybody here's a new program here's why it's going to work let's get psyched and do it so he's not the mastermind in any way part of the reason it's so controversial is, I mean the real reason his presence there is so controversial is the Nobel Prize which is awarded I think it's about a year later and the really unfortunate part is the Nobel Prize announcement comes just a few weeks after Pinochet's goons have assassinated a regime critic on the streets of Washington DC they blow up his car on the streets of Washington DC and then a couple weeks later Friedman wins the Nobel Prize now there's no connection between these events but it appears that this sort of right thinking people of the western world are padding the dictator on the head that's how it's framed nobody cares about what's happening in Chile look, they're celebrating this economist who's somehow responsible for what has happened so I think it all gets kind of mushed together to make a political point what's the future of Milton Friedman say 30, 40 years from now where will the reputation be because University of Chicago is no longer Friedmanite right? We know that there are fewer outposts of Friedmanite thinking than there had been would he be underrated or somehow reinvented or what? I mean okay let me look into my crystal ball I think he's going to be I don't think the name will have faded I mean I think there are still names that people read you know people still read Keynes and Mill and figures like that to see what did they say in their day that was so influential I do think that I think that Friedman has kind of got into the water and into the air a bit and I do some work on tracing out his influence within economics no one's going to say oh I'm a Friedmanite or fewer people are but you know this is someone whose major work was done you know half half a century or more ago so I don't think that's surprising it would be surprising if economics had better to stand still such as you know Friedman still called a tune I do think you know when you think about the way we accord importance to the modern Federal Reserve of course there were things that happened in the world but Friedman's ideas did so much to shape that understanding he's still in policymakers minds he's still in the monetary policy establishments minds even if they're not fully following him I think we're in the middle of a big reckoning now you saw all the debate about M2 and the pandemic and monetary spending I don't know where it's all going to settle out and it's a more complicated world than the one that Friedman looked at I tend to think he's sort of an essential thinker that the basics of what he talked about are going to be known 50 years from now for sure did Milton Friedman have friends he did he did he had lots of friends not colleagues not co-authors but other friends well so now that's an interesting thing because most of his friends were his colleagues and were those in agreement with him sort of ideologically he had a friendship with someone named Leo Rostin who was a humorist kind of a humorist a great writer wrote a lot of books about Yiddish culture yes exactly so he was friends with him but Rostin agreed with Friedman mostly right to read Rostin on the industrial revolution it sounds very Friedman probably I mean he probably glossed a lot of what he was hearing from Friedman he apparently did have a friendship with Daniel Borsden who's a historian at the University of Chicago I would say most of his close friends though were I would say either George Stigler or Aaron director were probably his closest friends and Aaron director was his brother-in-law and George Stigler was his you know grad school friend and eventually became his colleague so this is one thing I really noticed in the book that for Friedman friendship and ideological sympathy and commitment to a certain political vision they're all intertwined so he had cordial relationships with a lot of different people but they weren't quite friends and even I think the great crisis in his friendship with Arthur Burns was a policy disagreement and for Friedman that policy disagreement just calls into question the whole friendship although he very quickly tries to re-establish that connection and he won't let that connection go but the fact that it is so so stressed by their disagreement over monetary policy I think is really indicative so yeah he walked talked breathed economics all the time your other biography it's of Ayn Rand again it's called goddess of the market Ayn Rand in the American right before the novels was she a good screenwriter? let's see I think she probably was I mean she had success in a pretty competitive industry most of them tended to be these kind of melodramatic plots I actually like the film we the living they did a fairly good version of it the other thing it's hard to say compose a ton of original screenplays what she would do is take an existing screenplay and kind of tart it up a little bit make it more interesting so I don't know that will ever fully that would be a project actually to try to excavate which films did she have a hand in but the fact that she went from penniless immigrant you know to having a creative role in one of the major studios of her time it must have been something that was recognized also again as a woman in an era when that wouldn't have counted in her favor to any means which do you think is the best of the novels some would say least bad but either way like I said I'm partial to we the living it's set in Russia you know during the revolution so it has that historical flavor I like it's sort of a Romana Clef it's characters and family new so while the sort of central love triangle is quite imaginative and will strike many readers as not true to human nature the sort of ancillary characters I think do ring true so I think that her flights of imagination were sort of tempered by the fact that she was working from this material and I think it's just a fascinating glimpse into you know Russia 100 years ago so I think those and it's long but it's not quite so long you know the pity with Atlas shrugged is she was uneditable by that time and she really needed to be edited the sex scenes in Atlas shrugged and Fountainhead what do you make of them as a reader today I think they're part projection I think they also can be very usefully read as part of the romantic genre like if you were to pick up a romance novel in the supermarket you would find a very similar plot structure and so it's very much against our sensibilities the sort of rape as romance coercion as romance but again if you read a sort of dime store romance novel this is like a trope that's very common so I think she was kind of pulling on these tropes and then I think she was imagining this kind of heroic manly man that if she actually ever met in real life you know she would be attracted to and probably not even be able to tolerate but in her imagination this could be sort of an idealized partner I recall at age 13 visiting the foundation for economic education and Leonard Reed boasting to me in his office that he had had iron rand on his desk and pointing to where that happened I mean what was the equilibrium in her love life how did that work so let's see I don't know if I mean I'm sure she flirted with Leonard that would make sense the equilibrium was she was always drawn to younger men and that is sort of true from the beginning so she was very much drawn to her husband she was kind of the aggressor in that relationship and then there's a couple of before Nathaniel Brandon who was her student and then her collaborator and you know her longtime lover 25 years her junior there's a couple of other young men who she was testing as potential romantic partner so I found a couple reminiscences of the archive she would start a friendship they would come visit her and in retrospect they were like you know what if I had wanted to pursue this romantically she would have been willing or she was trying to set me up she was trying to seduce me but she was going a little slow and I didn't know what was going on so there's like I think there's maybe two people that were kind of in that position before Nathaniel Brandon and then I think once she was with Brandon she was pretty content with him she wasn't looking elsewhere so I think her equilibrium was what she achieved briefly which was a doting and supportive husband and an exciting secret lover much younger than her so she had it briefly but it didn't last What was the role of the Roy Childs open letter to Ein Rand? That's a great moment so Roy Childs writes this letter to Ein Rand he's basically saying if I remember correctly like be an anarcho-capitalist like you haven't gone far enough like if you follow the logic of your thought there should be no state whatsoever I mean she wasn't really paying attention and what did she call them hippies of the right you know she hated anarchists she hated libertarians she said by the end of her life she hated anyone who liked her which was a difficult position to be in I don't think that it had an impact on her but I think it was one of these documents that said to all of you who like Ein Rand but feel like she hasn't gone far enough let's go there together and we can appreciate her without feeling like we have to stay with her understanding of the state or her you know clinging to this sort of atavistic state and my feeling on both her and and they're not going all the way to Anarchy I think it has something to do with their backgrounds in Rand's case living through revolution and living in Europe in Friedman's case a very real consciousness of his Jewish identity and I think for both of them while they felt the state often discriminated against minorities I think they were more fearful of what would happen without a state in a situation of Anarchy that would be identified as you know racial or ethnic or religious minorities I think they had a visceral fear of that for themselves and for any other community that would be in that situation and so I think that kept both of them from saying you know blow everything up and let's just see what happens you know Roy later in his life admitted Rand was right and that his own open letter was wrong I didn't know that did Rand and Friedman know each other? They did and what did Friedman call her a like something like a terrible and dogmatic woman who did a great deal of good and to go back to Leonard Reid the big schism between Ein Rand and Leonard Reid so Leonard Reid was an early publisher of Libertarian pamphlets and materials came when he published Friedman and Stigler's Roofs or Ceilings which was an economic analysis of rent control and they were analyzing rent control from the position of economic efficiency like the rent control is economically inefficient and they were also philosophically opposed to rent control but they decided really strategically rather than get into this whole philosophical battle we're just going to talk about this being economically inefficient it's the policy choice and policy argument and Reid had Ein Rand understood that Leonard had agreed to use her as a kind of ideological gatekeeper and that he was according to her going to show everything the foundation published to her and she would give it a thumbs up or thumbs down and then it would be published so this may or may not have been the arrangement whatever it was Reid did not follow that process he published Roofs or Ceilings and Ein Rand read it and she hit the roof and you have this just fascinating situation where this one sort of titan of the American right Ein Rand is calling another you know figurehead of American conservatism Milton Friedman a communist she thought that Stigler and Friedman were communists because she could tell they were using this utilitarian argument and scrupulously avoiding any kind of moral argument and she viewed that as a sort of veiled way of neutralizing discussion of economic issues such that you couldn't make an ethical case on behalf of private property and so she became livid she and Reid had a huge fight letters back and forth she's gonna have nothing to do with Leonard Reid now interestingly Reid and Friedman also had a huge fight over this and part of it was because the original version of the pamphlet although it was mostly utilitarian in its argument it did have a nod to the idea that Friedman Stigler would like more equality than there is now and they said something like you know even if you want more equality the way we do like you should still support this on you know efficiency grounds or something like this and this is that influence of Henry Simons again who was much more egalitarian then Friedman and and when he was close to Simons Friedman had a more egalitarian cast well Leonard Reid his he had a henchman Orville Watts he was very very almost a social Darwinist I would say Watts did not want that in there and so Watts cut that out and and Friedman and Stigler said no no no you need to keep it in there and they said okay okay we'll keep it in and then they footnoted it and said something like well we disagree with this and then they publish in a bridge version of the pamphlet that cut it out entirely so Friedman and Stigler were so mad and they wouldn't talk to Reid for like five years so it to me this episode is just so illuminating because it's a question of how do we in 1946 coming out of the World War 2 era coming out of the depression coming out of the success of the New Deal how do we talk about economics equality and fairness should we talk about it in the old idiom you get what you deserve should we talk about it in a new idiom let's help everyone have the basics or should we not talk about it at all and use a language of economics about what is the most efficient which ultimately will be down to the greatest good for the greatest number and it's not really worked out and people have really different positions on this and so this question of rent control is really huge there's like a huge percentage of housing stock in the United States was rent controlled at that time due to the war there was an enormous housing shortage and so this was a really big issue it was coming up for Congress so everyone kind of got in and they couldn't figure out how to talk about it in a way they just couldn't figure out how to talk about a period so that's like the big explosion moment I think it's 46 and you know in another decade they'll be closer to kind of figuring out these questions what do you think of the Chris Kierbara argument that Rand drew a lot of her basic ideas from earlier Russian philosophy I think there's probably a good deal to it I don't know that I would lay it all he really emphasizes that I think it's the Russian over age I mean I think to my mind the clearest through line for her is Friedrich Nietzsche who would have been a presence in Russian intellectual circles but it's not necessarily Russian and so you know the fountain head in its original conception had a head note from Nietzsche on each of its four sections and she pulled those right before publication because she thought it's too much so I would say you know this idea she loved the phrase from Nietzsche like the noble soul has reverence for itself she loved all those ideas and they've just resonated with her very powerfully I think even in her unpublished work she really takes some kind of a bit to the edge of madness they're more tempered in the fountain head so but I mean I definitely I'm like yeah she's a Russian novelist look at those books they're huge they're panoramic you know she's very convinced of her role she's very convinced of the power of the intelligentsia right it was a complete conviction that a salon of committed intellectuals could cause profound social and intellectual change which of course she had seen happen so I definitely think she's part of that tradition but there's also you know she's not just Russian she's Russian Jewish and so I think there's a kind of counterpoint to that in her concern with you know the powers of this state and her focus on rationality and her celebration of you know other cultures a sort of high European cultures beyond Russia she in the end would say Russia it's just a mystical state you know it's interesting because in recent years when we've seen you know the glories fantasies of you know mother Russia or the role of the Russian Orthodox Church or all this you know the mythic importance of Kiev or whatever it may be I think back to Ayn Rand grumbling like it's just a mystical state they're all obsessed with mysticism she was right maybe so how did Rand and Mises get along Rand and Mises it's a complicated story there's a you know some of your more viewers and readers who are more into this literature might have heard of an anecdote or supposedly they screamed at each other at a party that appears to not be true that appears to be a rumor started by William F. Buckley to kind of cause trouble she actually loved Ludwig van Mises his ideas she felt she said on several occasions my economics is from Mises everything I know about economics I know from Mises so I think she you know they are both thinkers who kind of have this rational framework who kind of you know have a few axiomatic first principles that they then build a system upon so I think she really didn't know a ton about economics and hadn't thought about it until she read Mises so in person they did tend to clash they're both pretty difficult personalities sort of in the same way but the letters between them are always respectful and it was one of Mises was one of the few people living people that she didn't cut down to her students that she recommended her students read if you read the Objectivist Newsletter those mentions of him and articles on him so I think that was an important connection why is it in the 20th century in America fiction seems to have been so much more important for the left than for the right especially if you take away Rand why that huge difference that's such an interesting question it may have to do with I think a general truism that this sort of artistic and creative life is often a bohemian life as well in which traditions whether they be you know traditional marriage or traditional monogamy things like that are questioned as part of the kind of creative process it seems to be where things ferment and so you know if you are a person who values tradition and values established norms and social practices that may not be an environment conducive to creating imaginary worlds you know so I think you need a culture to support artistic creation and fiction creation and I think the culture once a culture tips a certain way it kind of goes that way so I could certainly imagine societies and perhaps your listeners will know ones too where the production of fiction is done more by conservative writers or thinkers but I would imagine they have a culture to support that even if it's just a city, a university a small tradition a literary school but I do think as much as creativity is individual it flourishes in community so you don't have that community it doesn't get written Why are there so few successful business women in American fiction so there's Rand, there's gone with the wind but very little else comes to mind like why are there so few depictions of women as successful business men there we go, I just said it myself whatever you want to call it I think fiction is trying to reflect the human experience to this date there's just been more men who've applied their life's work in business than women so I think that's part of it I think it's too bad I think Rand's created some memorable characters because of that and there is a way in which sure her characters are women but they're not engaging in pursuits that the vast majority of women engage in such as motherhood they're kind of living masculine lives although she's describing them as highly feminine so they're a bit of a blend in some ways Did Milton Friedman read much fiction? Not that I can tell I mean there's some stories where I guess Rose wanted him to come to the opera with her and he was like well can I bring a book so I can read if I get bored he didn't really appreciate culture and so there's also Anna Schwartz had a story where he was spending a semester in Paris and she was like oh the museums will be so wonderful and he said to her why would I go to a museum like just literally didn't know why he would spend his time that way so I think he enjoyed like I said he enjoyed the fiction of Leo Rostin that's really the only fiction I've heard of him from you know mentioning You know the literature on a musia which is a condition where you're not able to enjoy music sometimes cites Friedman as having had a musia I'm not sure that's confirmed do you know anything about that? No I don't that's interesting I haven't I'm not familiar with that literature it's that does make sense though with this story and I wonder if maybe they saw that story where you know Rose she loved the symphony she loved the opera and he was basically like okay fine I'll go but like I need to bring my own entertainment along so what he did for recreation he really enjoyed woodworking Aaron director was a skilled woodworker in his basement had a whole setup and so I think Friedman built all the literature for their first home by hand so he liked building he played tennis and he liked skiing so I think his relaxation was you know with his hands or sort of physical in nature I think otherwise when he was reading he was reading for work I also learned from your book by the way that Aaron director and Mark Rothko had been childhood friends Isn't that fascinating? It's really fascinating I have to say there's a historian from University of Rhode Island Robert Van Horn who's really excavated a lot of the early life of Aaron director and it's absolutely fascinating Very last really question or set of questions but what will you do next? That's a great question I have a couple of book projects in mind one is to just kind of look back a little bit more rather than write a biography of you know a central figure to kind of put them together into a broader story of the intellectual history of American conservatism or something like that so that's one more of a synthetic history I would say there's just been such an outpouring of literature on the subject I think it would be some days I think it would be fun to bring it all together other days I think it's gonna be maybe not so fun to have to pick through all that I'm also interested in writing something sort of a history of postmodernism because I've been teaching an intellectual history class here at Stanford that's been kind of tracing it across the century and I think that's potentially really interesting it would be quite different than what I've done thus far and so I guess I'll have to wait and see do I want to strike out for new terrain or keep kind of plowing the field I'm in so stay tuned is all I have to say on that Just one follow up question on that many of us observing history have the sense that the intellectual tradition within the American right has been in decline for several decades like A do you agree and B if so what most fundamentally is driving that change I think there are it's a less vigorously intellectual culture I mean one thing I sometimes face with undergraduates is they're genuinely surprised when I say well yeah the conservatives had all the ideas in the 20th century and the conservatives really made an impact because they came up with all these ideas that were really powerful important and they just it doesn't really compute because I think the conservatism they've grown up with is not driven by ideas in any meaningful way so I think that's certainly true I would say one of the reasons I think it's happened is that you know conservatism became an establishment and then you kind of have a set of greatest hits and you have a variety of ways you can make your living within this establishment provided you sort of adhere to the greatest hits so there's not a ton of incentives to do things differently I do think there's a lot of ideological ferment on the right or amid conservatives right now it's heavy on ideas it's often in internet forms that are not like deep engagement with ideas I would say in the same way as when you're reading books and magazines I think it's more faster and more rapid so I just it's really interesting like any we're all there's much more competition in the realm of ideas than there was besides reading a book or going to college that you can get ideas they're sort of coming out of everywhere coming out of the ether so I think that's going to lend less coherence and I think you can have a lot of people who are intellectual leaders of smaller tribes rather than having a couple of the big leaders that everyone's heard of Friedman Hayek this and that I just think we're in a more fragmented place I tend to attribute it to the media environment we're in which probably isn't going away anytime soon so the question is can we live and thrive in this fragmented attention ecosphere are we going to recreate something akin to the three big networks to kind of filter and manage all the information we have I think we'll see that evolve in the next 50 years again everyone the book is Milton Friedman the last conservative by Jennifer Burns B-U-R-N-S highly recommended Jennifer thank you very much thanks so much Tyler