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Milton Friedman on Self-Interest and the Profit Motive 1of2

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This clip is from the 15-part lecture series, "Milton Friedman Speaks" http://www.ideachannel.com/pro... Transcript available via FreedomChannel: http://freedomchannel.blogspot... student poses a series of question on based on Friedman's notion that people should pursue their own self-interest. The student points out that he'd read that Friedman had previously come out against disaster aid for victims of a flood in Pennsylvania. Friedman corrected the questioner and noted that he did not come out against private aid for flood victims but instead was against the Federal Government providing discounted flood insurance in advance to home purchasers which motivated people to build houses in areas where they otherwise would not have been able to obtain insurance privately. If not for the discounted insurance, it's likely many of the flooded houses would never have been built in the first place as it wouldn't have been in peoples self-interest.The student went on to note that it was recently reported that an old man in Ohio died when the electric company turned off his power when he'd failed to pay his electric bill. Was it moral for the company to act in it's own self-interest to do so? Friedman responded by asking what if the electric company never turned off the power for anyone? Who would pay the cost--the people who own or work at the electric company? It would be unjust to impose that responsibility on individuals who are running an honest business of providing electricity. Friedman suggests that the true responsibility lies on the mans neighbors and friends who were not charitable enough to allow him to meet the electric bills.Finally the student uses the example of Ford deciding not to install a $13 block of plastic which would prevent it's Pinto cars from exploding in a rear-end collision. Ford estimated such a move would cost 200 lives a year at a cost of $200,000 per life lost. They multiplied and found that it wasn't worth it to install the plastic block. He asked if a corporation seeking it's own self-interest was a good thing in this case? Friedman responded by asking, what if it cost $1 billion to save each life, should Ford have put in the block? It's simply not practical to put an infinite value on an individuals life. If it took $1 billion in resources to keep one individual safe, and acquiring those resources meant that a million people must starve, it's a bad deal. Friedman concludes that he doesn't know if the $200,000 number that Ford used was the right number to maximize the overall benefits, but at the end of the day the principle is that we can't simply protect ourselves from everything and impose that cost on others. Friedman posits that the question the student should be raising, is should Ford be required to attach the statement to the car, "we've made this car $13 cheaper, and therefore it is X% more risky for you to buy it".See also:Free to Choose - All 15 episodes streaming online for free http://www.ideachannel.tvA history of Free to Choose http://www.freetochoose.com

Channel: News & Politics
Uploaded: December 31, 1969 at 5:59 pm
Author: Sidewinder77

Length: 05:25
Rating: 4.72
Views: 31692

Tags: Capitalism  Communism  Corporations  Documentary  Freedom  Friedman  liberty  Milton  Politics  Profits  Socialism  Subsidies  

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OhMymy (December 31, 1969 at 5:59 pm)
Friedman believes in the goodness of people being selfish yet he believes charities by private individual
vansfreek (December 31, 1969 at 5:59 pm)
The polar opposite of free market principles are what caused the financial crisis. Government stepped in, pushed for homeownership to be extended to lower income individuals, loans couldn't be paid back, businesses fail, government steps in with a helping hand. Bankruptcy is a good thing sometimes. It's called 'creative destruction.' Read an econ book for once.
swixican (December 31, 1969 at 5:59 pm)
the dude in the red shirt probably has a PHD and is teaching your kids.. wow.... we're screwed yay pot
TGreaterG (December 31, 1969 at 5:59 pm)
The credit crisis merely proved that Friedman was right. Because the Goverment wanted people with low income (among which ethnic minorities) and first time home buyers to have a good home. Again, good intentions, the "true" American dream. But the objectives and the effects don't necessarely coincide, as Milton claimed.
nogoodname72 (December 31, 1969 at 5:59 pm)
bullshit! Friedman's ideology has not fucked up at all by the current crisis. The people in America had gone into credits without limits and now they should pay for it. The governments should not help the bunkrupt banks. This will all go back to the balance after some people understand that you cannot go into credit without thinking of how you gonna pay it back.
KhmerD0g (December 31, 1969 at 5:59 pm)
milton's ideology of free market fucked up by the current credit crisis. hahahahaaa. eat that milton. u can burn to hell, bitch.
TimLoganKnows911623 (December 31, 1969 at 5:59 pm)
It's well-known among economists that MARKETS are INEFFICIENT, from the narrowest perspective. The constraints of the post-war period (1945-1970) were instituted by the United States and Britain because it was assumed correctly that allowing governments to control capital movements & currencies would provide a basis for rapidly expanding growth in trade, which indeed happened.
TimLoganKnows911623 (December 31, 1969 at 5:59 pm)
What are "political motives?" Well that means participation of the population in making decisions. So we HATE DEMOCRACY. We dont want the public to be involved in decisions about things. We want to go back to "profit motive," meaning that a PRIVATE TYRRANY, which is what a corporation is, should look out for itself, NOT FOR PUBLIC INTERESTS
TimLoganKnows911623 (December 31, 1969 at 5:59 pm)
Alan Greenspan, refused to prick the bubble, as could have been done in simple ways, on the basis of religious belief in "self-regulating" markets. And finally, it came to this CATASTROPHE with this credit freeze where it's just been freezing up. Something has to be done. And it's interesting what the choices are. So George Bush announces the government is intervening in the banks, but we want to make sure that we go BACK to the PROFIT MOTIVE not policy motives, or not political motives.
TimeWarp66 (December 31, 1969 at 5:59 pm)
Friedmans genius lay in his recognition that information is dispersed: central planning is a fantasy because no mechanism, organization, or structure can process all the information needed on a minute-by-minute basis to direct capital and human energy to satisfy human needs. Its the ever-changing mix of independent producers in a free market who try to survive by meeting the changing needs that drive improvements to the human condition.
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