Milton Friedman - The Robin Hood Myth

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  • Опубликовано: 24 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 1,6 тыс.

  • @robinhansen8105
    @robinhansen8105 9 лет назад +1845

    The best way to fight socialism is to educate people in economics.

    • @angelinaalcantara5580
      @angelinaalcantara5580 9 лет назад +55

      You realize that there are many socialist economist, right?

    • @robinhansen8105
      @robinhansen8105 9 лет назад +128

      Lean Alcantara Yup, but education would still, in general, reduce the popularity of socialism. Hey, there's burning buildnings with fire exstingushiers, right?

    • @angelinaalcantara5580
      @angelinaalcantara5580 9 лет назад +17

      So, those socialists are less educated in your opinion? You know that people always disagree notwithstanding the same level of education and intelligence, right?

    • @robinhansen8105
      @robinhansen8105 9 лет назад +132

      Lean Alcantara No, I did not imply those socialists were less educated. I implied they were wrong.

    • @angelinaalcantara5580
      @angelinaalcantara5580 9 лет назад +2

      Well, initially you said "educate people in economics". But that's fine, so long as you clarified it now.

  • @Jordanicolass
    @Jordanicolass 8 лет назад +237

    The tax payers pay for it! Including the ones that don't go to school! Nailed it!

    • @andrewlunceford5503
      @andrewlunceford5503 7 лет назад +1

      such insight

    • @dostthouevenlogicbrethren1739
      @dostthouevenlogicbrethren1739 4 года назад +5

      Ironic that these lefties' solution to people not being able to get ahead is to force those who don't go to school, and thus work lower paying jobs, to pay for those who do......

    •  4 года назад +2

      Lower income people DO NOT pay almost any taxes, so the higher education is not supported by them. I like Friedman ideas, but sometimes he's simply wrong.

    • @silikon2
      @silikon2 7 месяцев назад

      @Yep, either things have changed or he's just wrong here.

    • @denysivanov3364
      @denysivanov3364 2 месяца назад

      That’s not true. Around 20- 25 percent goes to taxes if you are poor in California.. also employer pays additional 15 percent as social insurance and around ten percent more for health insurance, another tax basically.

  • @AmerginMacEccit
    @AmerginMacEccit 9 лет назад +308

    I absolutely love all Robin Hood movies, but the story was never about robbing people and giving to the poorest. It was about a noble knight, very loyal to king Richard fighting in the crusades while traitors conspired against him to divide and take over England. Robin Locksley was betrayed and outcast, he joined a band of brigands to fight opponents of king Richard and protect the realm. He robbed those who oppressed poor people with too high taxes and tyrannical laws.

    • @christiansoldier77
      @christiansoldier77 8 лет назад +2

      +brett kelly
      Robin Hood wasnt a socialist or antisocialist in his day the feudal system keep people poor so he was trying to give money to the poor instead of the rich having all th emoney

    • @higharcangle
      @higharcangle 8 лет назад +16

      +Christian Soldier Communism and some forms of socialism are inherently feudalistic though, because the political ruling class controls the flow of wealth.

    • @DTOptics
      @DTOptics 8 лет назад +11

      The rich in this case being the government. He was stealing from the government and giving back to the people.

    • @sixclocks
      @sixclocks 6 лет назад +1

      I remember the tv show. the song said 'stole from the rich and gave to the poor.'

    • @StarWarsomania
      @StarWarsomania 6 лет назад +5

      mitch dineen Yes, and David "Davy" Crockett killed a bear when he was only three.
      It's almost like... theme songs are simplistic versions of reality that you shouldn't quote when people are talking about actions in the real world instead of a television show.

  • @Huntington12345678
    @Huntington12345678 8 лет назад +860

    I've never been hired by a poor guy.

    • @iamasmurf1122
      @iamasmurf1122 5 лет назад +18

      Huntington1234567 i have its called having my own business, in business i can not afford to discriminate against the poor a lot of them are good customers i am hired by them , and not judging people you should learn

    • @adamfrisk956
      @adamfrisk956 4 года назад +19

      Michael Wilson For the love or God, use grammar!

    • @daveslyker4431
      @daveslyker4431 4 года назад +13

      @@iamasmurf1122 poor people don't hire contractors. They can't afford that

    • @b3hemoth448
      @b3hemoth448 4 года назад +13

      Nope but we did (unwillingly) hire them all to not do a job (welfare)

    • @maskedmarvyl4774
      @maskedmarvyl4774 4 года назад +2

      @@daveslyker4431 , I'm a poor person and I'm hiring a contractor right now. I don't have a choice.

  • @dewrus2153
    @dewrus2153 7 лет назад +28

    No matter if you agree with Mr. Friedman or not, we must admit it is quite refreshing to listen and watch someone talk about social and economical aspects of our society without name calling or inserting partisanship. There are a lot of important issues we need to work through but I find it difficult to discuss these issues with people today. It seems that we can't get more than two sentences into a conversation before someone starts blaming the left or the right, and regurgitating a bunch of crap they've heard from some biased media. I think if people could just focus on what is best for everyone instead of focusing on beating the other side into submission...we'd really benefit as a society.

  • @xallthatremains8339
    @xallthatremains8339 5 лет назад +228

    Can you imagine him trying to speak at a university these days? There would be riots

    • @jimgallagher5902
      @jimgallagher5902 5 лет назад +4

      Yep, moron millenials and snowflakes would rather "riot" than learn.

    • @willn5213
      @willn5213 4 года назад +11

      When he descrived the poor as less skilled i couldnt help think its true and also how that would piss a lot of ppl off if theyre in that demographic

    • @Bucketheadhead
      @Bucketheadhead 4 года назад

      Jim Gallagher There aren’t many millennials still at university buddy, unless they are doing postgraduate degrees. The youngest millennials today are 24 years old.

    • @jake_runs_the_world
      @jake_runs_the_world 4 года назад +1

      Uh no ? Get out of your Eco chamber

    • @lenurban
      @lenurban 3 года назад

      For good reason. His ideas are crap.

  • @NicholasWongCQ
    @NicholasWongCQ 9 лет назад +265

    he talks so much sense my head exploded

  • @davidcravatta386
    @davidcravatta386 8 лет назад +153

    One of the best American thinkers. Are you listening Sanders? How 'bout you Rodham?

    • @tomdalton4293
      @tomdalton4293 8 лет назад +7

      +David Cravatta Very intellectually gifted, but like many academic elites, no real world experience

    • @davidcravatta386
      @davidcravatta386 8 лет назад +11

      Respectfully disagree. I suggest you consider his policies he advised Volker to undertake. The result was one of the most robust economic expansions in US history.

    • @tomdalton4293
      @tomdalton4293 8 лет назад +5

      David Cravatta I agree with that. What I mean specifically was his views on workplace safety regulations, which may have been very different if in the 30s he had spent any time working in a steel mill, coal mine or some other highly hazardous occupation. This also applies to liberal academics who advocate for policies they and their families are detached from.

    • @davidcravatta386
      @davidcravatta386 8 лет назад +1

      Excellent pts

    • @knpstrr
      @knpstrr 8 лет назад +4

      +Tom Dalton The real point in the workplace safety for example, is that is it even the government's duty to be in charge of such things in the first place, should the government even have the power to be able to enact such regulations?
      Beyond that, Milton would argue (and has argued this point) that threat or resultant lawsuit(s) levied upon a company for poor working conditions would give incentive to have a more safe workplace. The fines just need to be higher than the cost of enacting said safety measures for this to occur.

  • @jimmysanders4813
    @jimmysanders4813 2 года назад +8

    Hard work and sacrifice have produced some of the most amazing people throughout history.The fight and the struggle develop our character that no government can honestly shape.

  • @andrewmcquade6848
    @andrewmcquade6848 8 лет назад +53

    There is a lot about Milton that I disagree with from my own experience in business and in education. However, his skill in arguement, his clarity of thinking, and his ability to explain complex concepts in simple easy-to-understand terms is a credit to his professionalism. Whether you're a right winger or left winger, authoritarian or anarchist, I think there is a lot to respect the man for. And, indeed, a lot to take issue with

    • @AdmiralPrice
      @AdmiralPrice 8 лет назад +20

      +Andrew McQuade I in turn deeply respect your ability to deeply respect the strengths of a man you disagree with. That is the cornerstone of civil debate and society, and is, unfortunately, dying out. We've become ideologues before thinkers, partisan loyalists before Americans (in my country's case). The ability to respect, listen to, and compromise with someone one deeply disagrees with is increasingly becoming a quality of a bygone age.

    • @armandoc.3150
      @armandoc.3150 5 лет назад +1

      @@AdmiralPrice Forreal when you just wanna have a discussion people turn it into a debate. It becomes a war to declare who is the winner and who is the loser instead of just understanding what makes us have the opinion we do whether we agree or not is irrelevant but finding a way we can comprise should always be the goal.
      In this election I hope people really understand not to hate eachother for who we vote for because the way I see it is that each candidate represents a personality of this country and we need to respect our differences and really think about what's best for everyone and especially the kids to determine our future.

    • @rogerdodger4212
      @rogerdodger4212 5 лет назад +1

      @@armandoc.3150 I think the only problem with that stems from the problem of enforced ideals. When one party has control they enshrine their personal beliefs in law and force those beliefs on others. That is primarily where the largest part of the animus between the parties originates. I think the only way we can coexist ideologically is to allow each other to think and act for ourselves as we choose and to keep the government out of individuals' lives. The problem is that neither party really wants that.

    • @rockwithyou2006
      @rockwithyou2006 4 года назад +2

      curious to know what those things are

    • @hieronymusboss7705
      @hieronymusboss7705 2 года назад

      LOL who cares about your "experiences"? My experiences, conversely, line up very well with Friedman's views. Surely you, someone who says he often disagrees with Friedman, would want me to put my bias aside and look at the facts? And so should you.

  • @joshm9407
    @joshm9407 9 лет назад +114

    Milton Friedman was smart enough to know that when a recession happens the answer isnt:
    "Tax our way out of this son of a bitch!"

    • @joshm9407
      @joshm9407 9 лет назад +5

      +hampe hjsjdf I was just agreeing with your statement. Narendra Modi who is the Conservative leader of India has an approval rating in the 80's because his pro business, Capitalist policies are working and making their streets safer, the poor better off, and businesses prosperous.
      People predicted that because he thinks and acts like a Conservative that he wouldnt be take. seriously, get elected, or be successful. But he proved them wrong.
      Canada also prospered under former Conservative Prime Minister Stephen Harper. God help them now thay they have a Leftist leader.

    • @joshm9407
      @joshm9407 9 лет назад +1

      +hampe hjsjdf In America Conservatives will hopefully "win by losing" which is a common expression. It means that by losing and creating a Liberal dominated Country there will be no room to blame Conservatives who are out of power when the next Great Recession happens. Then the famous line "Democrats are for helping the poor man." will never be believed again by the American people.

    • @joshm9407
      @joshm9407 9 лет назад

      +hampe hjsjdf Yep. When I was growing up parents took more responsibility form their children and taught them hard work, responsibility, and self reliance. And those Liberal generations were a lot less Liberal than today's young generation where many young people have either one, no, or irresponsible parenting. I was young myself, in those days I was Liberal, I knew everything about everything, and my father seemed so naive about the real world. Now after aging past 35 I learned my "Archy Bunker" dad wasn't a closed minded, inexperienced, dolt. Luckily I didnt vote back then.
      Today's "know it all" teenage voters vote Liberal because they "Know" what's best for America.

    • @haloljt
      @haloljt 8 лет назад +1

      +hampe hjsjdf No, the right wingers of Sweden are still social democrats.

    • @haloljt
      @haloljt 8 лет назад +1

      A conservative put you in this spot, a liberal improved your economy. Does being conservative mean that you waste all your money on warfare?

  • @mrmaciejm
    @mrmaciejm 10 лет назад +35

    I am a big fan of Milton!

  • @mrtimjitsu
    @mrtimjitsu 10 лет назад +103

    I love how people can come up with so many justifications for STEALING!!!!! I wonder if they justify rape and murder too

    • @stevohein2515
      @stevohein2515 9 лет назад +9

      mrtimjitsu Friedman supported a negative income tax policy, the most pure example of a redistribution of income. Perhaps you raving Randian types should stick to listening to her or Stefan "child snatcher" Molyneux

    • @SONicNRG
      @SONicNRG 9 лет назад +3

      mrtimjitsu yes, they just blame poverty and keep the argument circular; of course, they own terms like 'poverty' so no conservative using it knows what he's talking about.

    • @SONicNRG
      @SONicNRG 9 лет назад +4

      no, they call murder of babies in womb a 'medical procedure'

    • @artemiasalina1860
      @artemiasalina1860 7 лет назад +5

      "I wonder if they justify rape and murder too"
      They do. Just think about what people say when someone they don't like goes to jail. "Just wait til he meets up with Bubba!"

    • @DrCruel
      @DrCruel 7 лет назад +6

      MURDER: "You can't make a successful omelette without breaking a few eggs."
      -Vladimir Lenin
      RAPE: ""Red Army soldiers don't believe in 'individual liaisons' with German women," wrote the playwright Zakhar Agranenko in his diary when serving as an officer of marine infantry in East Prussia. "Nine, ten, twelve men at a time - they rape them on a collective basis." '
      ( . . . )
      "Our soldiers' behaviour towards Germans, particularly German women, is absolutely correct!" said a 21-year-old from Agranenko's reconnaissance detachment. A number seemed to find it amusing. Several German women recorded how Soviet servicewomen watched and laughed when they were raped. "
      www.theguardian.com/books/2002/may/01/news.features11

  • @_7.8.6
    @_7.8.6 11 лет назад +33

    Pretty honest assessment

  • @Bobby.Kristensen
    @Bobby.Kristensen 9 лет назад +256

    I love Milton Friedman.

    • @Bobby.Kristensen
      @Bobby.Kristensen 9 лет назад +3

      +monty tout What the hell are you talking about?

    • @williamnewton9232
      @williamnewton9232 9 лет назад +6

      +monty tout Take Obama's Nobel Prize too

    • @DemonsCrest1
      @DemonsCrest1 9 лет назад +2

      +Greedy Imp FREE @ Google Play
      *What the hell are you talking about?*
      Yea, I don't get monty tout's post either. Probably a socialist/feminist.

    • @DemonsCrest1
      @DemonsCrest1 9 лет назад +1

      monty tout
      *wrote "What the hell are you talking about? Yea, I don't get monty tout's post either. Probably a socialist/feminist."*
      *Well I can understand your post and can see that you are probably a Conservative Christian bigot. Feel free to correct me if I've misjudged you.*
      *MAJOR FAIL PEANUT HEAD!*
      *THANKS FOR PLAYIN'*
      *INSERT ANOTHER QUARTER TO TRY (and fail) AGAIN!*
      Not a christian or a conservative.
      Just someone who opposes a political ideology that *only* pushes for "gender equality" in instances where women are "disadvantaged" (and men are "advantaged") and *never* in instances where women are "advantaged" (and men are "disadvantaged").
      A political movement that *always* advantages one group over another is not a movement that is interested in "equality" but one that is interested in supremacy.
      I am not a bigot, just someone who opposes hateful and hypocritical belief systems.

    • @DemonsCrest1
      @DemonsCrest1 9 лет назад +1

      monty tout
      *Okay, now I get it. You're one of those loser "Male Rights Advocates."*
      *What's an example of an instance where women are advantaged and men are disadvantaged?*
      *I'm not saying there aren't any - but as a MRA I'm sure you could give examples, right?*
      Feminism is a political ideology that fights for 'equality' by systematically vilifying men in order to justify hatred and encourage discrimination against them. Feminism is 100% sexism against men, and this is the *only* thing that feminism ever does.
      Imagine for a moment that it was females who had a shorter life expectancy than males, that it was females who had more health problems than males, and that the majority of health resources were being spent on male health instead of female health. Imagine that it was females who were less likely to be given help as victims of rape or domestic violence than males, that it was females who were four times more likely to commit suicide than males, that it was females who were falling behind in education compared to males, and that it was females who were disadvantaged in courts and society when compared to males.
      Feminists would be claiming that all these things are clear evidence of a society discriminating against women, and would be pushing for all sorts of policies to make females 'equal' to males. However, when these inequalities *favor* the female, feminists don't seem to take notice any of these "gendered issues".
      If feminists were really interested in 'equality' between men and women, then they would be focusing on these *fundamental* forms of gender inequality. Instead, they focus on issues only affecting women. They focus on the "gender wage gap"; a myth that has been disproven countless times by economists from all over the world (proven false as early as 1971 by economist Thomas Sowell, as seen in "Thomas Sowell Dismantles Feminism and Racialism in under 5 Minutes" on youtube). They focus on "rape culture", a term that feminists appropriated in 1975 from a documentary exposing the issue of rape in male prisons, and now use it to exclusively hype up the issue of women being raped in modern society, despite the fact that incidents of this crime have been steadily declining since the 1980s. They focus on the "gender STEM gap"; the fact that there are fewer women in STEM fields, and never focus on the "gender education gap"; the fact that boys are falling behind girls in school, the fact that men make up only 43% of all college graduates, and the fact that men have been a minority in colleges since 1979.
      Feminists do not care about "gender equality". They only care about advantaging women and disadvantaging men. Feminism is nothing but a hypocritical man-hating political movement.

  • @johnsmith7298
    @johnsmith7298 Месяц назад +4

    Robin Hood was NOT about "stealing from the rich and giving to the poor", it was about resisting a government who overtaxed the people.

  • @toddbellows5282
    @toddbellows5282 5 лет назад +55

    Milton didn't foresee the tremendous inflation in educational costs that are caused by student loan programs.

    • @rogerdodger4212
      @rogerdodger4212 5 лет назад +60

      Those student loan programs you are referring to are government based. The federal government created the student debt crisis by creating federal student loan programs which place no accountability on the individual who takes the loan or the group giving the loan. When the government gets involved, they always fuck up the economy. The student loan crisis is a stark reminder of how the government caused the "great recession."

    • @KREllis-vr1ix
      @KREllis-vr1ix 4 года назад +3

      @@rogerdodger4212 I would say ALL responsibility is placed onto the borrower since bankruptcy isn't an option.

    • @rogerdodger4212
      @rogerdodger4212 4 года назад +8

      @@KREllis-vr1ix That doesn't matter when the government creates a crisis then provides the solution to said crisis in the form of bailouts, aka debt forgiveness. Liberals blame the banks for their mistakes and claim to be the heroes when they provide their shitty solutions.
      EDIT:
      Also, there is no declaring bankruptcy because there is no means to seek redress. I.E. the government can't repossess the education the person received or sue to obtain the payment by other means.

    • @irone93
      @irone93 4 года назад +4

      Due to government subsidized loans

    • @biggerisbetta
      @biggerisbetta 4 года назад

      literally australia tho

  • @aureate
    @aureate 12 лет назад +3

    You are correct. A relatively freer market would benefit everyone, but the "bad" people are geniuses of manipulation. It doesn't matter what system you impose, they'll find a way to ruin it in their favor. If we can preserve the sanctity of the internet, we can save ourselves.

  • @generatordoc
    @generatordoc 12 лет назад +2

    Can you imagine Frieeman's response to the Financial Services modernization act of 1999? The Gramm Leach Bliley Act made it possible for Commercial and investment banks coexist in one company...the main and primary beneficiary of this act was Citicorp and one of the majority shareholders in Citicorp today.....Brian Leach.

  • @DistinguishedMenofCulture
    @DistinguishedMenofCulture 4 месяца назад +3

    You can either agree with Milton Friedman, or you will be wrong so go over into the corner and sit there in your wrongness and contemplate your degree of being wrong

  • @H1TMANactual
    @H1TMANactual 12 лет назад +3

    "Government does not cause affluence. Citizens of totalitarian countries have plenty of government and nothing of anything else" - PJ O'Rourke

  • @Andybaby
    @Andybaby 14 лет назад +5

    As always, Friedman's logic is flawless.

  • @VictorHarrys
    @VictorHarrys 12 лет назад +1

    As Dr. Friedman pointed so many times: What causes economic collapse? Government intervention distorting the market. Take a look at what enabled the bubbles that push us further and further towards total economic collapse. We can blames big businesses, bankers, wall street, the rich white man, etc. But when you look to the root, it was the government that planted the seed and enabled the bubbles to grow.

  • @arcad1an292
    @arcad1an292 9 лет назад +76

    If you listen closely and add up all the things that Mr. Friedman teaches us, you'll see how we got to the point where there are either the very rich or the very poor. And you'll come to the conclusion that it's not the free market that causes this, but big government coercion.

    • @davidcopperfield2278
      @davidcopperfield2278 7 лет назад +1

      Capital reproduces itself, or what is called in simple language money makes money. Every person has basic needs as housing and eating. Housing and eatings cost the same for everyone, yet proportionally, for the same individual housing and food costs the richer PROPORTIONALLY a lesser percentage of his capital than the poorer one. Can you follow ? If I work for minimal wage I spend most of my money on rent and food but if you are a billionaire, lets say you dont invest in a clever way and simply put your 1 billion into a swiss bank with 2 percent , your billion becomes 1,02 billions , so your housing business has just grown by 50 houses in one year ! my immobile business has grown by 0 houses this year ! In what schoolclass do you learn exponential courves in the US, cause I m really wondering why the fuck i m explaining this to you ?! So it is only a question of time until the housing and the food markets will monopolize in the hands of a few , the house and the land owners !! Everybody else becomes house and land renters !! From the point of view of the free market since price fixing cant be forced the house and land owners are free to fix such rent prices that the rest of the people will have to work 80 hours a week just to have where to live and what to eat ! In fact, the owners are actually FREE to put such prices that no matter how much you work no one will be able to afford nor housing neither food ! And nothing can be done about it , they are free to choose whether they whish to put affordable prices on their products, or unaffordable ! Do I really need to explain to you how monopolies naturally accure and what the consequences of those are ?! If thats the result you wanna get, a society where a minority is free to decide about the life or death of majorities , I wish you and all the others free market lovers to manage to infiltrate the upper 0,01 percent ! good luck !

    • @davidcopperfield2278
      @davidcopperfield2278 7 лет назад +2

      man I am re-reading your comment and wondering if you are really that stupid or doing it on purpose ? Wealth if not regulated always monopolizes itself ! Only forced regulation (redistribution) can forbid it to monopolize ! And you are saying that disproportions between rich and poor aggravates because of the regulations and redistributions ! Are you fucking nuts ! This is not even math ! this is commen sense !

    • @gpecaut1
      @gpecaut1 6 лет назад +13

      David Copperfield partially correct, but far from any real outcome. That money the billionaire has invested creates capital for investment in business. That creates jobs. At some point there becomes more jobs than there is labor. That means to get employees, wages must go up. That helps the population as a hole. If he has control of most of production and does not produce increasing the economy, then he will have a pile of worthless cash, as the market will just continue around him. Even if he could gain every last bit of cash, the markets will just function around him. Be it by barter, or a new form of money. The beauty of Capitalism is that it self corrects. The discomfort of Capitalism is that it swings back and forth, is hard, if not impossible to control, and although it will never equally distribute wealth, it is the best to create wealth. Only in a free Capitalist society can a person grow from the bottom quintle to the top in a life time. And as the old saying goes a fool and his money are soon parted.
      Earn what you own
      Own what you earn

    • @Shaft-Industries
      @Shaft-Industries 6 лет назад

      WISE ARCADIAN Are you inferring that there is not much of a middle class? What out of curiosity defines the really rich and the really poor if you could assign annual wage dollar amounts to this?

    • @AtlasFullsun
      @AtlasFullsun 6 лет назад +2

      And because of technological progress, it's now easier than ever to self improve and get middle-class income.

  • @mustang607
    @mustang607 2 года назад +2

    He makes such reasonable and logic arguments you just know he could never have been a politician.

  • @andrewbudiman1310
    @andrewbudiman1310 7 лет назад +10

    that intro song sounds like it belongs in a kids spy movie.

  • @c20995
    @c20995 13 лет назад +2

    Who is this guy? He's brilliant. Why haven't I heard of him before? I went to college, I haven't seen any economics or social books authored by him in any class. No mainstream media covers him, conservative or liberal.

    • @jimhughes1070
      @jimhughes1070 2 месяца назад

      That's right... Once you make the next leap, and the next..
      The invitations to family gatherings will become rare😂🤣😎...
      Humans without consciences are pure evil... They can steal your Liberty, and make you think your life is going to be better😂

  • @romekk3975
    @romekk3975 4 года назад +16

    I would like to become Robin Hood. I would steal from the rich and give it all to myself as I identify as poor.

    • @dangeroreilly2028
      @dangeroreilly2028 3 года назад

      I get it! That's a very old W.C. Fields joke.

    • @jimmysanders4813
      @jimmysanders4813 2 года назад

      That is the premise of the corrupt lie of black lives matter.

  • @sfjeff1089
    @sfjeff1089 12 лет назад +1

    The real point here is, you have two separate money pools that intermingle. The consumption pool feeds into wages for further consumption, capital investment for expansion, and profits. The capital pool feeds into new industry development and provides supplemental funding for capital investment as needed. If the consumption pool is starved, then you are faced with an unpleasant choice of shrinking the economy or inflating the currency with leverage against you.

  • @1jackal1
    @1jackal1 8 лет назад +9

    Regarding taxes and welfare programs, it seems Mr Friedman is purposefully failing to mention that people in higher income brackets pay higher percentage of tax than lower earners. So it's not a case of one section of society paying more than another, they pay more or less the same.

    • @novuml670
      @novuml670 8 лет назад +3

      there should be a flat tax

    • @kingmatt2563DABEST
      @kingmatt2563DABEST 8 лет назад

      Quick question has the Progress party abandoned its Capitalist beliefs.

    • @luciascheffelvazquez998
      @luciascheffelvazquez998 6 лет назад

      I guess that what Milton is trying to say is that the return on taxes of social programs is higher for middle income classes than for poorer classes. Because both social classes benefit equally of the program but the percentage paid of the tax relatively to their earnings is higher for poor people. I guess the point missing here is he is not taking into account that for example equal welfare (health, transport, infrastructure, public services) among classes provides a much desirable context for economic growth and social stability.

    • @gpecaut1
      @gpecaut1 6 лет назад +1

      kingmatt2563 yes

    • @gpecaut1
      @gpecaut1 6 лет назад +3

      Lucía Scheffel Vázquez remember these are old clips. There were not the grants then that are available now. Back then you really had to earn any scholarships. Student loans were much more restricted, and many of them required collateral. Today it is easier for any poor minority to attend college than it is for most middle class students. There are grants for being poor, grants for being black, grants for being female. There are discounts for being an illeagle alien. The Rich just pay. The poor if they graduate highschool with any kind of decent grades can get into a college, the funding will be there. We have made it pay to be from a professional welfare family. We have made it pay to be a victim. And worse of all, we now punish those that save, invest, and work hard to earn there own way.
      Earn what you own
      Own what you earn

  • @BigMathis
    @BigMathis 11 лет назад +1

    Not exactly true. The government wastes a much smaller percentage but when poor people receive free money, they lose their incentive to work hard.

  • @mikestevens1728
    @mikestevens1728 4 года назад +23

    Im barely able to support myself. And my taxes have to go lazy ass people that dont want to try and improve there situations

  • @lordnate2000
    @lordnate2000 11 лет назад +2

    Assuming everything your culture does is the best, that works. If not, then it doesn't. Also, the effectiveness of education is based on the effectiveness of the educational system. When the system regulated, then it is based on the quality of regulators. Everything always comes back to the quality of leadership. Like I said, a monarchy is fine, if you have a great royal family. That is not true in most monarchies, as great leadership is rare.

  • @gregedwards3533
    @gregedwards3533 4 года назад +3

    6:43 you know you are good when Bucky Fuller is in the audience.

  • @BLUEGENE13
    @BLUEGENE13 6 лет назад +6

    he makes a moral argument against taxing for providing schooling, but he forgets to mention that all taxing is morally wrong.

    • @reneburger4317
      @reneburger4317 2 месяца назад

      We need police, basic health care, roads... to maintain societal quality. All other taxes are robbery, essentially.

    • @magneticman245
      @magneticman245 28 дней назад

      ​@@reneburger4317 are taxes necessary for those things to exist?

    • @reneburger4317
      @reneburger4317 28 дней назад

      @@magneticman245 where does government get its money: taxes we all pay. We as taxpayers fund everything our government does. So if for instance afro americans claim reparations, you and I are paying them while I and my forefathers didn't own slaves. If you don't drive a car, still you pay for road maintenance.

  • @youngscooter6290
    @youngscooter6290 5 лет назад +4

    Milton is my favourite economist

    • @youngscooter6290
      @youngscooter6290 5 лет назад +1

      Johannus Steinmarch his principals still apply, and that’s what counts

  • @UnexpectedWonder
    @UnexpectedWonder 12 лет назад +2

    His words were highly prophetic. These are the conditions America faces today politically and economically.

  • @Lukas4182
    @Lukas4182 5 лет назад +34

    "it's the hardest thing ever to pass legislation to increase tuition fees"
    That quote hasn't aged well. Tuition fees nowadays are ridiculous

    • @fuckinggoolglemangwtfiswro4000
      @fuckinggoolglemangwtfiswro4000 5 лет назад +14

      The problem is that stundent loans don't function like reglar loans.

    • @willn5213
      @willn5213 4 года назад +2

      @@fuckinggoolglemangwtfiswro4000 yea atleast with other loans its going towards an object of value that can be sold back if things get too bad financially

    • @samuelcamachopalencia5737
      @samuelcamachopalencia5737 4 года назад +1

      I think that what he meant is that no sane politician would ever run a campaign saying "increase the cost of college!" And that is very much true. Everyone is running on the premise of lowering the cost of university, at least publicly. While tuition fees (as a college student, they're ridiculous) are high af, they always campaign on lowering it, even if they don't.

    • @Logan753-g1v
      @Logan753-g1v 4 года назад +7

      They never passed legislation to increase tuition fees. What they did is pass legislation creating a federal student loan program for the good intention of “educating everybody”. Once universities realized that 18 year olds can borrow an unlimited amount of money to pay for schooling, universities shot tuition fees to the sky. As long as someone is willing to give young people loans with an unlimited magnitude, the cost of education will be expensive.

    • @chuckmason7930
      @chuckmason7930 2 года назад

      @@samuelcamachopalencia5737 mean it? He practically spelled it out.

  • @laxave1767
    @laxave1767 9 лет назад +1

    I slowly begin to think, after watching more and more of Friedman in action, that he was a very simple mind that needed (like many economists do) to simplify the world he lived in to understand it.
    Edit: and I might add, had a big desire to understand that world fully, even though he wasn't cut out for it.

    • @fzqlcs
      @fzqlcs 9 лет назад

      +Laxave Obviously, you know little about Milton. He has many articles in scholarly economic journals. He sought to simplify economics so the common man could understand them. He apparently failed in your case. That you are slow to think is obvious.

    • @laxave1767
      @laxave1767 9 лет назад

      fzqlcs Haha. Do you really think I don't know who Friedman was? I know he was an economist, I'm just saying that he and many many economists besides him (in fact, you could say the whole field of economics) simplified human behavior and made the claim that we act on the basis of one motivation which has been proven wrong and wrong again. So when you try to belittle me with your ''you haven't read Friedman's wikipedia page'', maybe take it easy next time.
      I was broader point than just he's an amateur.

  • @libertarian500
    @libertarian500 7 лет назад +4

    One of my favorite Econmist!!!!

  • @fzqlcs
    @fzqlcs 12 лет назад +1

    Do you conclude Milton is corrupt because he does not advocate giving you something for nothing?

  • @scottab140
    @scottab140 9 лет назад +43

    The upper class doesn't pay for Well-Fair Programs. They only pay dividend and long term investment taxes. People don't realize that most, not all , of the upper class to contribute heavily in charity foundations from the taxes they would have paid and are smart enough to contribute to society as they see fit versus allowing and trusting the government to spend wisely..

    • @rodrigo445678
      @rodrigo445678 9 лет назад

      +scottab140 You can't be more right!

    • @rodrigo445678
      @rodrigo445678 9 лет назад +9

      monty tout It worked in the US until the Fed came out. Worked on Sweden, Singapore, Hong Kong. France, Germany and the UK they all had capitalist economies in the past. No social democracy has created a rich society. Today's social democracies have a capitalist past.
      Socialism hasn't produced a single dollar in economic prosperity.

    • @rodrigo445678
      @rodrigo445678 9 лет назад +7

      monty tout Your knowledge is impressive... Show one example of a successful socialist society? . Scandinavian countries became rich thanks to free markets. Specially Sweden. You should study a little history.
      It must be humiliating that someone younger than you can expose your stupidity.
      If what you are saying is true, then explain Sweden and Hong Kong economic prosperity.
      Hong Kong didn't had any important natural resources, but even so they managed to became the second richest society in Asia.
      And you are showing your ignorance once again. The actual system isn't in the middle. You can't be half-free. Either you respect liberty or you oppress it. Today's system has only little aspects of capitalism. It's not capitalist to have a Federal Reserve. It's not capitalist to bail out big banks and car companies. It's not capitalist to have the highest corporate taxes among the developed countries. It's not capitalist to have a broken welfare system. It's not capitalist to regulate every single industry there is. It's not capitalist to manipulate the value of the dollar.
      We are closer to socialism and we are failing. 17 trillion in debt are destroying the economy. . Sweden's social democracy dream lasted less than 30 years. Now they are privatizing many public institutions to improve supply and quality.

    • @neo.616
      @neo.616 9 лет назад

      +Rod96 wrote "And you are showing your ignorance once again."
      (Fans: that's like being called stupid by someone drawing daisies at the local autism clinic)

    • @neo.616
      @neo.616 9 лет назад

      +Rod96 wrote "The actual system isn't in the middle."
      Then how do you explain all the social programs in America like Social Security, Welfare, Medicare, Food Stamps, Auto insurance, Life insurance, Homeowner's insurance, police and fire departments, city and state utility departments, and on and on.
      You sure do miss a lot of stuff. Maybe when you get older ... nevermind.
      Conservatives tend to get more stupid with time. I don't see why you would be any exception.

  • @sammiches6859
    @sammiches6859 4 года назад

    Thank God this is recorded. We should switch to this on Sundays.

  • @dargon1084
    @dargon1084 10 лет назад +10

    Forgive me for being blunt and out of context but the first 15 seconds sounds alot like what softcore porn sounds like

  • @DeadEndFrog
    @DeadEndFrog 6 лет назад +2

    6:20 there is an incentive to force the rich to pay for the poor however. And there is even an incentive for rich people to do so themselves too, if they don't want to live in an uninformed democracy..

  • @merchantsailor
    @merchantsailor 8 лет назад +5

    doesn't matter all the fantasy theories of how economies should work, the hard sad truth is human nature is failed. and steps have to be taken to offset the excessives of hoarding all the things that are precious to life.

    • @knpstrr
      @knpstrr 8 лет назад

      +merchantsailor like Ferrari's

    • @skaruts
      @skaruts 6 лет назад +2

      What's wrong with ferraris? Each ferrari that is sold gets food on the tables on a whole bunch of people. Thanks to the magnates that are willing to buy them. Seems like the free market has a way of redistributing wealth, which makes socialist wealth distribution plans unjustified and useless.

    • @hamnchee
      @hamnchee 6 лет назад +3

      Thinking that rich people hoard money is ignorant. What good is hoarded money? Money is only valuable in that it can be exchanged for goods and services. They spend that money, why else would they want it? That spending is what perpetuates an economy.
      You say "how dare he buy a yacht, what a waste!".
      You might as well be saying "how dare all these blue collar middle class folks get jobs in the yacht factory, at the boat repair shops, at the the boat parts manufacturing plants, and how dare anyone follow their dream to be hired by a billionaire as a boat captain, hiring deck crews, maintenance crews, chefs, etc?"

    • @jimgallagher5902
      @jimgallagher5902 5 лет назад

      Nonsense... all of what you say...nonsense. And you presumably meant to write, "human nature failed", and no one hoards things, so quit making things up.

    • @jimhughes1070
      @jimhughes1070 2 месяца назад

      Yes... The argument of every good communist... less freedom

  • @theXsynergy
    @theXsynergy 12 лет назад

    Oh and just to say, I'm not like stalking the page or whatever, I just got lucky when I looked and you had just posted :)

  • @PFB1994
    @PFB1994 11 лет назад +13

    Is this guy joking? The people in the middle are most effective at political activity? Seriously? Is he for real? The richest dominate the political activity, you don't find many people making it to Congress who previously worked a 46,000 a year job.

    • @PFB1994
      @PFB1994 11 лет назад +5

      Which means the middle people have no power whatsoever, they have to choose between ultra wealthy person one or ultra wealthy person two.

    • @PFB1994
      @PFB1994 11 лет назад +2

      There's no choice, we are sold the 2 party system with millions and billions in ad spending. How can people have a choice, when they can't even get the message from a libertarian party or green party, for example.
      Someone with some good ideas can't just run for office, they have to find ways to raise money - and the only way to raise a lot of money is to say what billionaires like to hear.

    • @Dogboy1960
      @Dogboy1960 11 лет назад +2

      He's not just "serous" ....he's exactly CORRECT!! Middle class pays virtually NOTHING. AT least at the Federal level you certainly don't. By the time a family of 4 earning $100,000/year deducts all the child care stuff, mortgage interest deductions, and the exemptions they get just for having 4 breathing people in their home the bill from the IRS is remarkably small. Then there are all the programs from education, to medicare and social security....... all of it designed to benefit them more than anyone wealthy or poor.

    • @Ottuln
      @Ottuln 11 лет назад +1

      *****
      You have to be a party member and pay for your own campaign during the primaries. Primary campaigns can run into several million dollars, so good luck with the fund raising as an anyone.

    • @garymorrison4139
      @garymorrison4139 11 лет назад +5

      Of course, Milton would rather bite his tongue off than acknowledge the existence of a class structure. He uses the term middle class but in the next breath denies the existence of society itself beyond the market The capitalist utopia that Milton spent his life advocating for was not adapted to the available social world but housed his model of an antisocial superman dwelling in a mythic political and historical vacuum. The heroic narrative that forms the subtext of Friedman's idealization of the market might be adaptable to the format of a comic book or a proto-fascist mass movement but performs poorly as anything but an alibi for a two class model of society. Milton's Reagan era supply side economics were in the end, marginalized by an inherent inability to conceptualize the social ills it creates coupled with a naive if doctrinaire political incompetence at dealing with them. He deployed the rhetoric of economic freedom to obstruct the exercise of political liberty by the majority through the available institutions of Democracy that remain our best hope of rationally facing the responsibilities imposed by the demands of justice equity and equality that the market has proven time and again incompetent to fulfill.

  • @tannhaeuserx464
    @tannhaeuserx464 9 лет назад +1

    He mentioned that there were some students from the poor families who benefited and then said they don't count because they were entering middle class. Duh. Isn't this the idea, gov providing opportunities for students from poor families?
    So he left NJ when he graduated. Others graduated from NY and moves to NJ and they all pay more taxes because their salaries are higher as the result of their gov subsidized education?
    And he mentioned student loans. Yes we have student loans, but what a mess it is. Okay, he said this a long time ago, but now we have empirical evidence.

    • @skaruts
      @skaruts 6 лет назад

      His point was that the ones that can't afford to get a higher education are paying for the higher education of those who can, including the poor ones that are exceptions.

  • @MaskedMarvyl
    @MaskedMarvyl 10 лет назад +5

    LOL! Leave it to Friedman to make Robin Hood into a villain. Next up in the Friedman series: Why Scrooge, an innocent job creator, was victimized by Tiny Tim...

    • @martinwhite7053
      @martinwhite7053 10 лет назад +2

      Years ago my eldest Grandson was reading "A Christmas Carol" and I helped him write his essay on the book. I had to say that Scrooge wasn't a crook, he was scrupulously honest in fact. I concluded that he was a mean minded individual with no empathy and no hint of altruism. Had I know about Milton Friedman I would have used him as an example. At least Scrooge had an opportunity to make amends and to admit that his values were screwed.

    • @TheGeneralOfWar
      @TheGeneralOfWar 9 лет назад +7

      Friedman didn't do anything here but point out FACTS, namely where the money goes in gov welfare programs.
      Does speaking truth offend you if it doesn't line up with what you want to believe?
      If you people truly gave a shit about the poor, you'd want to know if gov welfare was going to the upper class instead of the poor. But instead you attack him for pointing it out.

    • @gpecaut1
      @gpecaut1 6 лет назад +1

      The Clinton's make millions off of helping the poor.
      The only question is, can you actually find anyone ever helped by the Clinton Foundation, other than those that work for it.

    • @skaruts
      @skaruts 6 лет назад +1

      He didn't make robin hood into a villain. The robin hood myth is a a myth based on the misconception that robin hood stole from the rich and gave to the poor, hence the name The Robin Hood myth. He's not making robin hood a villain, he's making the state a villain. The Robin Hood myth is just the name that's used for referring to the excuses politicians use to take money from people.
      And that's a misconception because in reality Robin Hood didn't stole from the rich to give to the poor, he actually took the taxes that were stolen from people and gave them back to people. He was pretty much someone willing to fight against the thieving tyrants.

  • @sfjeff1089
    @sfjeff1089 12 лет назад +2

    "you cant judge the Great Depression years starting AFTER the stock market collapse and INCLUDE the collapse in the end of the Bush years."
    Point taken, but it is really not that unfair to include a crash with the economic conditions that caused it. The economy was steadily hollowed out over the period and replaced by asset bubbles. Some people were estimating that the financial and real estate sectors hit 40% of the economy by 2007, but I don't have a good source on that ATM.

    • @jimhughes1070
      @jimhughes1070 2 месяца назад

      I know the moderately small home builder I was working for had four and a half million dollars worth of inventory sitting still.. when she finally had to stop giving me house plans...
      Interest rate skyrocketed... Practically overnight...
      That's the Fed😢 shutting down the housing bubble... That was created by... The government😂

    • @jefflittle8913
      @jefflittle8913 2 месяца назад

      @@jimhughes1070 The housing bubble was created by Reaganomics as part of the everything bubble. If consumption dollars are capped at a certain level and investment dollars go to infinity then every single asset class has people bidding up each dollar of earnings higher and higher. It is a nice cocaine rush as your house price goes up but because income from asset price increases are fundamentally a buffering action on income lost in the form of wages it is a net negative.
      If the home building industry were (in the past) subject to Walmartization then we would have hit Great Depression 2 a long time ago.

  • @sebleaper8491
    @sebleaper8491 9 лет назад +8

    It's a shame Friedman didn't live to see the Great Recession in 2008. It would have been interesting to see how he'd justify the corporate collusion and rate fixing that occurred in the private sector. It would also be interesting to hear his thoughts on his old friend Alan Greenspan admitting to being wrong about the deregulation of the banks.
    Also, why is it that the lowest earners in society tend to receive fewer benefits due to their living shorter lives? Is it due to less healthy lifestyles because higher quality food is more expensive? Is it because the fear of not being able to pay the bills drives somebody to smoke or drink even if they can't afford it? Is it because they were brought up by parents who smoked and drank? Is it because of low quality state schooling or unaffordable private schooling leaving people less well educated about health?
    Now, I'm by no means justifying the adoption of life-shortening habits like smoking and I largely support the argument of individual choice and responsibility in these matters. However, the causal links between income inequality and these sorts of habits cannot be denied. Life at the bottom is hard and not it's not because of paying small amounts of tax. Individualism does not liberate all individuals. Friedman is using a negative effect of the system he proposes as a criticism of the system he opposes. This is cray cray.

    • @marja70
      @marja70 9 лет назад +24

      Seb Leaper There newer was a 'deregulation of banks'. The banks are gvt sponsored and protected business. They are so heavily regulated and subsidized that they are not part of free capitalism. Study how banks are 'capitalized' through murky gvt financial operations every time they get into trouble.

    • @1man1bike1road
      @1man1bike1road 9 лет назад +4

      +Seb Leaper the government is bank sponsored not the other way round

    • @lhanso20
      @lhanso20 6 лет назад +1

      He would never try to justify that.

    • @jimhughes1070
      @jimhughes1070 2 месяца назад

      Never.. not even once have I heard the good professor justify wickedness😮...
      Human nature cannot be avoided... That's why government does not belong in business at all... It's none of their business😂

  • @mites7
    @mites7 13 лет назад

    @fzqlcs this is quite possible one of the wisest youtube comment's I've ever seen. I just recently graduated with a commerce and language dual degree (Finance and Arabic) and I have peers who major in Engineering, Marketing, Science, Entreprenuership, Computer Digital Media etc, and I can really see their drive and purpose. However at the liberal arts campus we have a lot of kids who major in things I really cant see as being useful, but our tuition is 30K+ per year.

  • @spartan2600
    @spartan2600 12 лет назад

    I agree with you in general, but there are a few quibbles I have. In its modern era, Singapore never put Friedman's policies into practice, the government has always had an extremely dominant role in the economy. Consequently, Singapore has one of the highest living standards in the world.

  • @UnexpectedWonder
    @UnexpectedWonder 11 лет назад

    Yes and no. Perspective matters. Some who think critically may not speak up, may go along for selfish reasons, or may even be biased against Truth for strange reason. Otherwise, I totally agree with you, sir.

  • @mezkitsu
    @mezkitsu 11 лет назад

    We are a monocultural society, not a multicultural society. We focus on our own economical branches rather than foreign systems. But at the highest level good education is simply a high score, no matter what lessons you are taking. It's about being the highest performer in your chosen subject.

  • @shawnsnow6413
    @shawnsnow6413 4 года назад +1

    This didn't age well. Post secondary education provides little to no financial assistance to the middle class now. If your parents are $1 above the poverty level then saddle up for 40k in student debt, while the dirt poor and minororities groups get to experience college for free regardless of academic performance.

  • @sheikhkhalid5969
    @sheikhkhalid5969 2 года назад

    Most of my us education (I've had many) was paid for at 6.57+/- per hour, at Four colleges of my choosing. That was 24 years ago, when I was a "pay out of state tuition" foreign students working on campus at non-state wages.
    So I made a choice Milt.
    I will never do anything for "Fixers".
    Let alone data-theoretics across market space.
    I cut wood for a living, I like it, and used to be a database programmer.
    Your lectures are plane ardvaark Devine for provocation.

  • @sfjeff1089
    @sfjeff1089 12 лет назад

    " The New Deal was a failure. There was a double dip in '37!" The double-dip was caused by raising interest rates to 7%, balancing the budget, and raising taxes all at the same time. They reverted the first two, left the third, and it recovered amazingly quickly. The 10% average growth rate included the recession!!

  • @mezkitsu
    @mezkitsu 11 лет назад

    I'm a Native American, and my culture is Native American. But we have had many Spanish, Portuguese, British, Chinese, and Japanese immigrants. We have a much wider mix than the USA does in regards to ethnicities, but we all share the same culture.

  • @Leto2ndAtreides
    @Leto2ndAtreides 2 года назад

    The top 1% of earners pay around 30% of all taxes collected, the top 10% around 60%, and the top 50% ... pay more than 90% of all taxes collected.
    Low income classes don't generate much in terms of taxes. Average government spend per person is higher than the taxes paid by most of them.
    So you can't say that the low income classes are paying for the upper income classes, even if they work more years of their life.

  • @scottjohnson7780
    @scottjohnson7780 2 года назад

    I cannot remember a time that I approached a homeless person with a resume or advice on my future. The "rich", or those willing to start a small business are the ones that make our capitalist society work, and provide opportunities for others to do the same.

  • @JohnKpl
    @JohnKpl 10 месяцев назад

    I don't know what it was like in Friedman's time, but from what I observe it's the opposite. The middle class loses the most from government programs. It is at her expense (taxes) that money is given to the poor, through the government and the rich

  • @samuelking4723
    @samuelking4723 3 года назад +1

    It’s not the benefit of the poor at the expense of the rich, it’s the expense of the poor at the expense of the rich.

  • @Hirfel
    @Hirfel 12 лет назад +1

    Right on man. Trickle down economics is the myth.

  • @lordnate2000
    @lordnate2000 11 лет назад

    There are many examples of people that didn't have good grades or didn't have a high level of education, that were highly successful. The problem is that the class room atmosphere is not the same as the working atmosphere. Some people are very comfortable reading and studying books, but when it comes to implementing things they are unsuccessful. School tends to be difficult for self learners who would rather study things practical to their own life rather than the required curriculum.

  • @rogerdodger4212
    @rogerdodger4212 5 лет назад

    I normally agree with the bad MFer but I dont think this was a well thought out argument. The social security tax is a flat percentage paid on the first $XX earned. The rate for 2020 is 6.2% paid by both the earner and employer. The maximum taxable amount for 2020 is $137,700, therefore the maximum contribution is $8,537.40 by each earner and employer totaling $17,074.80. The average middle class income in 2016 was $78,442. The amount that would be paid in 2020 on that amount is $4,863.40 each, totaling $9,726.80. The average income for the lower class in 2016 was $25,624. With the fixed rate you would pay $1,588.69 each, totaling $3,177.38. That is less than 1/5th the amount the upper class would pay and less than 1/3rd of the amount the middle class would pay. When it comes time to collect your benefits, everyone receives a fixed amount. While the lower class may be paying for a few extra years while students are in college, the upper and middle classes will certainly pay far more over their lifetime than the lower class.
    This is one of the few unfortunate failures I've seen the bad MFer make on economic matters.

  • @kingkong24680
    @kingkong24680 8 лет назад

    people criticize on his ideas now that he passed and cant defend himself. If he is still alive and you ask him the same question, he will put these guys back in their place like he did during his lectures and debates. if the people who criticize him truly understand economics like he does, maybe they deserve a nobel prize too. I am not saying there r not great economist that veiw things differently, but they all respect this man and his contribution in this field. it is not because what he says is bs that he pull outta his ass.Even today, he is one of the highest looked upon figure in his field.

  • @mezkitsu
    @mezkitsu 11 лет назад

    That is true, that is where the apprenticeship phase of education comes into play. All of it works toward your final grade, both studying and field achievements. Our education system is very different to yours, and we aren't based on a strict schedule. Many of our students do focus on their own practical interests.

  • @carlosprada4852
    @carlosprada4852 5 лет назад

    The lower classes may pay payroll taxes according to their salaries, thus contributing to governmental programs. The rich also pay income tax, plus they open up new businesses for the rest of us to work. Some will not be able to reap benefits from those taxes, while some others will abuse them. However, that doesn't mean we should not tax constituents.

  • @JonT1137
    @JonT1137 12 лет назад

    You're correct to a point. Poor people are still taxed indirectly by increased cost and decreased jobs. The best way to benefit those who are earning lower wages is to grant economic freedom to all, as you said.

  • @sfjeff1089
    @sfjeff1089 12 лет назад

    (cont) When the entire working class loses money consumption has to go down or prices have to come down, and they don't control prices.
    Further if the entire working class as an aggregate has incomes that go down, that also doesn't mean that they stopped working as hard. It means that they became less able as a class to negotiate pay based on their work.
    It would be a shame to stop making nice things because we are not able to defend the negotiating leverage of our working class.

  • @sainchawlonen
    @sainchawlonen 9 лет назад +1

    does he ever talk about the 'trickle down economics' myth??

    • @jimhughes1070
      @jimhughes1070 2 месяца назад

      Oh that straw man argument made up by democrats? 🤣🤣
      People in the west whining about being poor 😭...
      One of the most stupidly ironic things I've seen😢

  • @NoProbaloAmigo
    @NoProbaloAmigo 12 лет назад

    Which is why Friedman was for the lowest central government spending possible and competitive markets. The most effective way to divide power among business interactions is competition - meaning that the "buying" of force to hamper competition is minimized by the self interest of others.

  • @foxtrot870
    @foxtrot870 12 лет назад

    That is to assume a majority of low-income residents end up going to college. The transfer rates show a very different story. The motivations are usually monetary and are mostly unrelated to discrimmination but that doesn't change the impact. Perhaps we should allow ignorance to be the ultimate defense for our actions? Ask yourself what is greed. Keeping for yourself? or taking from someone else for you?

  • @dekutree64
    @dekutree64 7 лет назад +2

    Apparently we did what he asked, having people borrow money for school on the expectation that they'd make plenty afterward to pay it back... and it might have worked, except all the jobs disappeared in the meantime. Wish Milton was still alive to hear his opinion on the best way out of this situation.

  • @lordnate2000
    @lordnate2000 11 лет назад

    The role of higher education, is to get your first job. If you are able to acquire the job you are seeking through your education, then your education was successful. Businesses hire people to get results. If a business hires bad people, it goes bankrupt. So, the incentive to hire well educated workers exists. The government doesn't necessarily have an accurate measurement for success. A failing agency can continue to keep running if no one closes it.

  • @mwangikimani3970
    @mwangikimani3970 12 лет назад

    I was making a point (I wouldn't advocate for slavery). If you view labor as a capital input (like an ox or donkey), the model still stands. As long as the market for these capital inputs is free market. The cost (food, shelter etc.) of servicing this capital will be called "interest".
    The model still stands perfectly. The irony is that most wages are so low as to be considered just "interest" on capital. How much wealth does your typical worker stash away?

  • @mezkitsu
    @mezkitsu 11 лет назад

    There are many methods, ranging from donations to services. We believe that people should willingly donate money to their government if they have a good government, as it displays loyalty to your homeland. When I speak about services I am talking about operations that government runs to earn money, things such as maintenance, real estate, and mining. By providing paid for services in no-risk business areas my government can earn money through hard work rather than through extortion by taxes.

  • @mariamarymiriam293
    @mariamarymiriam293 11 лет назад +1

    Please don´t take it out of context... GOD will punish any sinner, rich or poor, but in the case of the rich, He will punish for serving money and not GOD. That´s why I wrote examples to avoid being misunderstood. So there is a great responsability for a rich Christian.
    Mark 10:25
    Proverbs 28:8 He that by usury and unjust gain increaseth his substance, he shall gather it for him that will pity the poor.
    Luke 16:13, Matthew 6:24

    • @jimgallagher5902
      @jimgallagher5902 5 лет назад

      Sorry, but wrong, Maria.. Usury is, as defined today, is the practice of making unethical or immoral monetary loans that unfairly enrich the lender. Originally, usury meant interest of any kind. A loan may be considered usurious because of excessive or abusive interest rates or other So, if you don't want to be "rooked" by usury, stop buying things you cannot afford or can't build up the money to buy.

  • @Dvirnatan
    @Dvirnatan 4 года назад

    I Agree completely, but it is interesting to see if the fact that taxes are paid as a percentage of the salary, change the fact that the total amount paid by a middle class and a poor person is not qual.

  • @rogermetzger7335
    @rogermetzger7335 3 года назад

    All we need to do is to agree about where the line is between taxation and theft. Those of my friends who aren't willing or able to enter into civil dialogue on that subject deserve what they get.

  • @antmanistheman
    @antmanistheman 8 лет назад

    What about food stamps, or any other conceivable benefit which would provide benefits in the same manner as a negative income tax?

  • @ductuslupus87
    @ductuslupus87 12 лет назад +3

    Oh, well, then I'm a capitalist LOL. Thanks for the help. I really mean that. I now have a starting point. Thank you.

  • @shawnsnow6413
    @shawnsnow6413 4 года назад

    College educated people will earn nearly 1 million more over a lifetime compared to those with a highschool education. FICA tax is currently (15.3%/2) 7.65% per individual + an additional .9% for high earners. That means highschool educated laborers would have to earn enough to offset 1 million dollars in the time it takes the college educated kids to graduate and join the laborforce. You can pay in longer but that doesn't mean you pay as much.

  • @quinnrasta42
    @quinnrasta42 13 лет назад

    @Nerfball6 I understand it completely, however, I do not think gabsave does with his/her comment "respect the will of the majority in a democracy." This is exactly why I quoted Jefferson. Funny comment made ,was about Friedman "forcing" his ideology on others, if people actually listened to Friedman they would know it was his life's work to remove force. He wanted to let people make free decisions, "buy a product, dont but a product" Take his advice, dont take his advice...he was about freedom!

  • @enderwiggin8947
    @enderwiggin8947 4 года назад

    As wise as you are, and as true as this is, your legacy has been corrupted by power and greed to the expense of those you sought to enlighten, and the gain of those forces you sought to expose.
    The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants. Thomas Jefferson

  • @kschanchal
    @kschanchal 12 лет назад

    The problem with the logic is that education is considered a commodity to be sold to those who can afford it, and not as a necessity for every citizen. If you look at this is another perspective. We want to give the eligible candidates i.e. people with greater skills access to the best education so that they can contribute better to the society.

  • @mezkitsu
    @mezkitsu 11 лет назад

    I do not believe the main function of government is regulation and protection. I am a monarchist, I believe the main function of government is to lead through moral example. I understand your point on regulation and business, however we work around this by having a rating system. Anyone can start a business, but in order to be highly rated in consumer standards you have to follow the government guidelines. It's optional to follow them, but it helps build consumer trust, so most choose to.

  • @sfjeff1089
    @sfjeff1089 12 лет назад

    Lowering interest rates to incentivize consumption only works if it causes assets of the 99% to go up in value or if it encourages business expansion. It has very low leverage when interest rates are already near zero. Incidentally, interest rates heading toward 0 is the natural consequence of moving large numbers of dollars outside the radius of consumption (ie. making poor poorer and rich richer).

  • @shaneroper477
    @shaneroper477 5 лет назад

    And economics is at the lower end scale of ecological law. A human invention is economics. VS ecological law which universal and has far more experience than human economics. Which one will you listen too?

  • @el_padron_1795
    @el_padron_1795 6 лет назад

    I dont even agree with his views, I just like hearing a well spoken person, (hard to come by nowadays)

  • @vtech243
    @vtech243 13 лет назад

    The government is not a loan agency it is not good at it. There is the issue that lower class people will almost certainly be charged a higher interest rate on their school loans which may be "unfair." But I agree, why should I have to pay for someone else to go to school? One thing he did not mention was scholorships. People that want to pay for students can give money to scholorship organizations!

  • @mariamarymiriam293
    @mariamarymiriam293 11 лет назад

    As an example to what I wrote before, I would use the fact of the freedom of some American business owners, who have closed their factories in the United States moving them to countries like China (because the cost of labor is cheaper there) while using the American people just to buy the products produced in those other countries. Or even "investors" who have purchased American factories as laundry rooms for other of their "business", and once the "washing" is done they close the factories.

  • @minimax9452
    @minimax9452 7 лет назад +1

    Milton Friedman worked for chiles dictator pinochet who killed and tortured ten-thousands of people.
    Wikipedia: The Rettig Report concluded 2,279 persons who disappeared during the military government were killed for political reasons or as a result of political violence. According to the later Valech Report approximately 31,947 were tortured and 1,312 exiled.In 2011 the commission identified an additional 9,800 victims of political repression during Pinochet's rule, increasing the total number of victims to approximately 40,018, including 3,065 killed

    • @enematwatson1357
      @enematwatson1357 4 года назад

      Uncle Milty did not "work for Pinochet". He was a great humanitarian who did his best to put an end to violence in Chile.

    • @minimax9452
      @minimax9452 4 года назад

      @@enematwatson1357 Here ist the picture - Friedman with the mass-murderer and torturer Pinochet having Tea-Time netakias.files.wordpress.com/2015/06/fredman-pinochet.jpg

    • @enematwatson1357
      @enematwatson1357 4 года назад

      @@minimax9452
      Yes. He did advise Pinochet on how to put an end to Chile's terrible economic woes as the best way out of the political crisis. As I said, great humanitarian.

    • @minimax9452
      @minimax9452 4 года назад

      @@enematwatson1357 Great humanitarian who advise a dictator and never mentioned the people been tortured and murdered by Pinochet? I think you can find the paradox on your own.

    • @enematwatson1357
      @enematwatson1357 4 года назад

      @@minimax9452
      I certainly could if there was one. 😏

  • @skibumwilly1895
    @skibumwilly1895 12 лет назад

    In “Inheriting an Abundant Earth” a simple rule tweak on inheritance ends up changing the direction and purpose of modern human life! Here’s a fair way to transition forward! It's something specific we can demand. If this isn’t the best answer, at least we’re thinking about what might be. Are we really just this close to having it work right? Oh yeah, it's a Ski movie! Watch “Inheriting an Abundant Earth” on RUclips, then sign the petition, and share it everywhere!!

  • @NoProbaloAmigo
    @NoProbaloAmigo 12 лет назад

    It's wholly relevant - that it is simply a myth that "more democracy" will solve a problem that needs division of powers, not populism.

  • @mezkitsu
    @mezkitsu 11 лет назад

    When I speak of employment in government it means that civil (non-noble) staff are hired on the basis of academic achievement. So our departments choose the most qualified people based upon their grades. The measurement for success is the grades of the student, and my government is required to hire only those who score the highest grades.

  • @johnlinehan8564
    @johnlinehan8564 Год назад

    In Chicago, an alderman put in for a grant to reconstruct the elementary schools that were located below the L trains, cause the noise of the trains were effecting the childrens hearing as they passed by. So the city was granted 6 million to sound proof the schools. But with ALL federal programs, by the time it got down to helping the kids, there was ONLY $ 250,000 left in the grant. So they bought ear plugs for all the kids. Sad but true. There’s govt in a nutshell

  • @mezkitsu
    @mezkitsu 11 лет назад

    When I speak of merit in government I mean the method of employment. For example, if you wish to become a minister of medicine then you must be a doctor with one of the highest grades in the country. If education was paid for, then only the rich would be able to afford the highest rated academies. Therefore all education must be free and of the same high standard, otherwise we exclude the poor or those unable to find good education from government employment.