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Thursday, November 27, 2008
Friedrich Hayek on Meet the Press in 1975
You really should listen to Friedrich Hayek's interview on Meet the Press from 1975 via the Mises Institute's podcasts. You can listen to the interview by clicking here (George F. Will from National Review is one of the people asking him questions).
Jeffrey Tucker, over on the Mises Economics blog, points to three things that stand out for him:
1) Hayek is amazing here. He holds the line. He is patient and explains very well. He refuses to relent. The core of his message is rooted in the Austrian view of cycles, and this interview demonstrates that he never stepped away from it, despite some far-flung claims.
2) The line of questioning he endures is hilariously naive and idiotic. We think we have a Keynesian problem now; it's clear that these people really believe that policy makers can manipulate the economy like a machine, trading off unemployment for inflation and back again, with no trouble. So they hit Hayek for his supposed personal opinion that unemployment is better than inflation, as if the trade off is direct and easy to manipulate. How far we've come!
3) In light of the present crises, and the appalling ignorance of the present generation of policy makers of any historical understanding, it is so helpful to remember that we've been down this road before, and done all the wrong things before. Forget learning from history. The present generation does[n't] even know enough history to learn anything from it. So this interview really makes it clear what has come before.
h/t Jason Talley
Posted by P.M. Jaworski on November 27, 2008 in Economic freedom | Permalink
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