Get Free Checker

Milton Friedman

NOUN
  1. United States economist noted as a proponent of monetarism and for his opposition to government intervention in the economy (born in 1912)

How To Use Milton Friedman In A Sentence

  • Milton Friedman, the father of monetarism and free-market economics, sees little prospect of a return to the global deflation of the 1930s.
  • Nobel Prize-winning economist Milton Friedman once lamented that since everyone handles money, there are many know-nothings who think they understand economics.
  • It would be nice – and good for my portfolio – for them to be proven wrong, and I can fuzzily imagine a scenario in which President Obama, newly sworn in, throws off the mask and announces that he has long been a secret disciple of Milton Friedman. Elections 2006/2008
  • The Milton Friedman Institute was conceived by faculty from the university's economics department, the law school and the graduate school of business.
  • The Milton Friedman Institute was conceived by faculty from the university's economics department, the law school and the graduate school of business.
  • In fact, the book Reflections on the Great Depression, which interviews many famous economists, finds James Tobin criticizing some New Deal policies (the cartelization policies that Hamilton decries) and Milton Friedman praising some of them (going off the gold standard, which Hamilton praises). The New Deal and the Great Depression, Arnold Kling | EconLog | Library of Economics and Liberty
  • Clinton is a Goldwater Gal whelped at the breast of Milton Friedman ... South Carolina Legislator Switches From Obama To Hillary
  • I'm no fan of public education as it's currently implemented-off the top of my head, Milton Friedman's voucher proposal in Capitalism and Freedom seems infinitely preferrable to how we do things now-but if the choice is what we have now or *no* public education system then I favor what we have now. Opting Out: Do Efficiency and Liberty Really Conflict?, Bryan Caplan | EconLog | Library of Economics and Liberty
  • If you simply marched down the Milton Friedman path of markets argued Nader, then you would would end up with Wild Capitalism, or worse, the kind of gangsterism that plagues the Russian economy today, The Russians dismissed Nader's warnings, and the subsequent US govenments in Washington, DC did little to assist in the process of change that was to come in Russa. Derek Shearer: Russia and the West Under Clinton and Bush
  • There is sadness to the ambition and drive of the eternally brilliant Summers; a modesty and realism to Milton Friedman; an endearing goofiness to Stiglitz (who for all his absentmindedness, notes Hirsh, seems to have a way with women). Robert Teitelman: Michael Hirsh's "Capital Offense"
View all