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The Legacy of Milton and Rose
Friedman’s Free to Choose
Economic Liberalism at the Turn of the 21st Century
October 23–24,
2003
A Conference Hosted by the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
Session 4 Q&A
Q: Let me start with one for Tyler.
I believe it was Benjamin Franklin who said “Those
who sacrifice liberty for security will soon find that
they have neither.” In light of the recent elevation
of national security to our number one goal, almost
our only goal, with all its implications for American
immigration policy, are you concerned that the U.S.
will lose its multicultural identity?
A: [Tyler Cowen] I am concerned
about this to some degree. I think a number of our immigration
problems would be easier if controls on the border with
Mexico were not so tight. I think what happens is the
tighter you make the control, the more likely an illegal
Mexican is to simply stay in this country. But ideally
what a lot of them would like to do is come here for
half the year and work and then go back to their villages.
So that the total size of the problem, I think, would
be smaller if it were easier to cross the border. Now,
do we think that by tightening up the border with Mexico,
we can keep out Al Qaeda terrorists? That to me is implausible.
I am no expert on the topic of Al Qaeda and the ability
of terrorists to enter this country, but it seems to
me that we’ve lost perspective, and the main goal
here really ought to still be liberty and prosperity,
and we’ll need to rely on other methods to fight
off Al Qaeda. Tightening up the border with Mexico is
neither an appropriate nor an effective means of doing
that.
Q: On the general topic of globalization,
we have the following questions. Since globalization
seems to be irreversible, how should public policy be
structured to make it more palatable to people, for
example retraining, education or whatever?
A: [Cowen] Well, I think the important
point is that it’s not irreversible. There was
a good deal of globalization in the late 19th century.
Starting with the First World War going through the
1930s, it was reversed to a very significant degree.
We’re very fortunate that post-World War II Europe
worked out the way it did. So I think the first priority
is not to take it for granted and make sure that you
keep free trade, free movement of investment and some
fair degree of free labor movement. In terms of how
to make it palatable, the question there is to whom?
And that’s a case by case issue for the French,
the Canadians, the Mexicans, the Americans, it all depends
on the case. But I think it’s fair to say, as
Milton himself has pointed out, there will always be
a stronger emotional resistance to capitalism and trade
than logical resistance, and I think none of us really
have the silver bullet for that problem.
A2: [Gregory Chow] May I answer
the 42 percent, the figure that Gary [Becker] doubts?
I have to tell you a few stories, a few examples. Before
economic reform, you can say that the government took
care of 100 percent of Chinese education on all levels.
Now, it’s amazing how fast the private education
spread. In the 1980s, for example, when I visited my
hometown, one of my colleagues in the university, he
was a professor but then he started a private school.
And what he did was, he went to a nearby area and he
asked the government to give him land. The government
is interested in promoting education, so he got a piece
of land. But he needs buildings. So what he did was
that he collected one hundred thousand yen from the
parents. But that’s good for six years of primary
school. You give me one hundred thousand; the six years
of schooling for your kids will be taken care of. They
just started the whole thing, and there are so many
people. Now this is in the 1980s, one hundred thousand
yen was quite a bit of money. But there are enough people
to pay for it and that school was successful, both financially
and in terms of quality. Now, I can spend the next hour
giving you what I know about this. I have other friends
who have started this kind of thing all over the place.
Another example. My sister spent only about $100,000
to start a school in interior China to name after our
father. Now, $100,000 is peanuts but $100,000 going
to a little village, you can start a school out of that.
I will finish with one last example. There’s a
village that most Chinese in the U.S. came from up to
the 1930s and 1940s. One village supplied almost 80–90
percent of Chinese Americans. They all came from the
same village. One of my friends in Hong Kong contributed
money for education in that village; in fact, two of
my friends. So, one day we took a trip to that village.
My two friends, they started with grade school, high
school, college, everything. Now, I think in that village,
it’s not 42 percent. It’s 89 percent. Of
course, this is not a typical example. If you include
the amount of money that the Chinese citizens are willing
to pay and if you include the thing about entrepreneurship,
it’s not that hard to start a college. Now, nuclear
physics or whatever, now that’s difficult, but
if you want to have economics, all you need to do is
find somebody who knows how to lecture, so the cost
is very cheap. That doesn’t mean the quality is
good. But, anyway, it will teach you something. So you
don’t need much. You can offer college level courses,
and there are so many of them all over the place. That’s
what happened in China.
A3: [Gary Becker] I wanted to
comment on the globalization issue more. Now, the question
in your answer gave the impression that it’s simply
an educational process. But what about special interests?
A lot of people are opposed to globalization in their
own particular context because their company or their
industry might be hurt by it, even though the country
may benefit a lot. Now, Peter [Boettke], you went a
lot into special interests and so on, which is very
important, and how much of the opposition to globalization
that we’re seeing in certain quarters. I’m
not talking about the 17-year-olds who are out there
opposing it, but some of the political opposition in
the United States, some of the opposition in Latin America,
some of the opposition in Europe is a result of the
fact that there are industries that don’t want
the competition from China and elsewhere. This is an
old opposition that’s been with us, as you said,
since the 19th century and earlier. The educational
process is going to be very difficult because they know
what they are doing, it’s just that they don’t
want the competition that they have to face under a
more globalized environment.
A4: [Cowen] I agree with that
completely. I think the problem is not so much educational
as emotional. The people choose political views for
all sorts of reasons. Special interests have the influence
they do because they’re able to reach out essentially
to the median voter and package it in a way that many
people will buy into. I think it’s this joint
confluence of special interests and voters who are more
irrational than undereducated. And I don’t have
an answer to that. I really don’t.
Q: The relationship between economic
freedom and political freedom is widely reported. That
said, as economic freedom increases in China, how long
will it take for full political freedom to follow?
A: [Chow] What is meant by full?
I don’t know whether in my paper I discussed it
or not. The optimal degree of political freedom differs
across countries in my view, so maybe the optimal degree
of freedom could come in the not too distant future.
Say there’s an optimal degree of freedom for China.
Today it’s not there. Today I would say it’s
maybe about 65 percent there. So you have 35 percent
to go. So you will see significant changes in the next
two decades.
Q: The Chinese banking industry is
subject to intensive government regulation. How can
we achieve a healthy degree of competition by freeing
government regulations, particularly of foreign banks?
A: [Chow] Well, there are some
positive signs. The Chinese government would like very
much to have their banks behave like Chase Manhattan
or CitiBank. But, of course, they can’t do this
for a number of reasons. First of all, inertia, because
there’s a habit of how people do business. You
don’t change institutions so easily by ordering
it. So institutional inertia and also human capital.
These Chinese bankers don’t have Harvard M.B.A.s.
In the old days they did banking the old fashioned way,
which is not banking at all. So they don’t have
the talent you need for all of this. And it’s
not that the Chinese government doesn’t want it.
In fact, they give it a lot of attention. They try to
send bankers to the U.S. to take lessons. They want
to invite American experts to go there to lecture. They
try to do all kinds of things. China is big, you know,
there are so many banks in China. And the WTO is really
shaking them up. I was in China in March and I played
golf with a bank president, actually my host. This was
South China, near Hong Kong, and I said, well, what’s
happening now, because the Hong Kong banks are coming,
right? They opened up WTO. Well, he said, we’re
in serious business. He said, we are trying very hard
to update our skills. We are concentrating on telling
our staff that they better wake up. They are trying
very hard to modernize things, so they’re under
pressure. But, how well they will do is hard to say,
but they are under intensive pressure to modernize.
Now, some people, in terms of the WTO, they’re
concerned. If they let foreign competition come in,
will the Chinese banks go bankrupt? But it won’t
happen. So, the question about the positive or negative
effect of competition through the WTO membership. See,
Beijing signed all these agreements to say that in five
years time, by steps, a foreign investor can come in,
they can know how many percent. They have all these
steps. However, if the foreign competitors are going
in too rapidly, the local government will slow them
down. It’s one thing for Beijing to agree on something,
but the foreign firm has to enter someplace, and the
local government can just give them a little more red
tape. Fill out some more forms. They can slow it down.
Q: You said before that the government
really wants this.
A: [Chow] The Beijing government
wants it.
Q: But not the local government?
A: [Chow] The local government
wants it too. They want it too, but sometimes they monitor
it. They monitor the speed of foreign competition, but
they wanted it.
Q: But not too fast?
A: [Chow] Not too fast, exactly,
not too fast. You do the same.
Q: In the view of government policy,
the local government has a lot of power over that. That’s
the reason why you’re not getting the banking
reform more freely.
A: [Chow] I agree, but it’s
human nature. I mean, the best Beijing can do. Beijing
is trying its best, but these local guys, it’s
not within their control.
A2: [Peter Boettke] Well, I just
wanted to comment on the comparisons that are often
made between Russia and China and the lessons that that
has for gradualism versus big bang approaches. I think
that the literature on this is somewhat confused because
they don’t recognize the difference between de
facto and de jure. In China, you’ve had less de
jure changes in the political system but actually a
lot more de facto changes. In Russia, you’ve had
a lot of de jure changes but not really de facto changes.
And the real issue on this has to do with fiscal decentralization.
This is an aspect which Barry Weingast at Stanford has
emphasized a lot in his work about the emergence of
fiscal federalism in the Chinese system, and this is
one of the things that’s driven the economic success
of China. But it’s extremely important for us
to recognize this distinction between what is officially
going on and what is really going on, and then the forces
of what’s really going on have to bear on the
sustainability of the official system. And actually
in this debate between economic freedom and political
freedom, the argument that I’ve always understood
is that economic freedom is not a guarantee of political
freedom but it does put certain pressures on it. In
Free to Choose the Friedmans have this discussion about
letting the genie out of the bottle in Yugoslavia and
how that’s going to challenge eventually the system,
before the system started to fall apart. I think in
some sense we might see similar things going on in some
of the countries in order for them to have the sort
of sustained economic reforms which they pushed in,
you necessarily decentralize the effective decisionmaking
power of political authorities.
Q: Many people want to travel to Cuba
as it currently is, and fear that it will be spoiled
by being opened to capitalism and world markets. What
comments would any of the speakers have about that?
A: [Cowen] The golden age of Cuban
music was in the 1950s, when North Americans were going
there in great numbers and in fact essentially paying
for that music. Cuba was an incredibly open economy.
It had more TV sets per capita than anywhere else in
Latin America. It was a trading nation. It was a combination
of Latin and African and European and North American
cultures. So the things that are wonderful about Cuba
come from a time of openness. To the extent there’s
any problem, it’s the problem you see with the
former Soviet Union, that when you destroy a place for
decades and then open it up, it can’t handle the
pressure. It’s not an argument against opening;
it’s an argument against destroying the place.
But let’s not blame openness, because openness
is what brought us great Cuban music.
Q: Many people compare the economic
performance of China and India and conclude that autocratic
government is superior to democracy? Could you comment
on that?
A: [Chow] India has been doing
quite well in the last couple of years; four or five
percent growth is not bad, while China has eight percent.
To the extent that India has not grown as fast as China,
I don’t think it’s because of democracy.
I think it’s mainly because the Indian market
is not open. It’s much easier for a Chinese entrepreneur
to start a firm. For an Indian entrepreneur to start
something, I was told that it goes through a lot of
red tape. I think that’s the reason why, it’s
not the democracy in India. That’s my five cents
worth.
Q: Well, we’re running out of
time. Let me ask one more question, if I might ask Milton
and Rose to please answer too as we close here. Why
have the two former communist countries Russia and China
proceeded down such different paths as they opened up?
A: [Chow] Well, I know why China
started that path. In China they wanted to change because
the cultural revolution was very unpopular. So the governing
Communist Party, in order to stay in power, had to do
something different. But the Chinese government economic
planners also realized that planning doesn’t work.
They learned from bitter experience—they’d
tried it. And so there was a lot of understanding. They
knew it doesn’t work, so they wanted a change.
Another thing, they saw the successful example of the
four Asian Tigers: Hong Kong, Singapore, South Korea,
Taiwan. And so that’s why the Chinese wanted to
do it. But the government is in control. The government
wanted to guide China through institutional reform.
Now that’s the Chinese story. Let me keep quiet
on Russia. Let me not say anything about Russia.
A2: [Boettke] Well, I will just
reiterate what I said before; the biggest problem with
Russia was that they actually didn’t implement
the reforms even though they said that they were implementing
reforms. The classic example of this is their adoption
of monetarism. They adopted monetarism and all you heard
from critics of the system was that the age of monetarism
is over and everything like that. At the same time,
the ruble went from 180 rubles to a dollar in 1992 to
over 5,000 rubles to a dollar in 1995, during a time
when they were supposedly following a tight monetary
policy. It was only a year ago that they had some discussions
about private property. So they didn’t really
have the reforms. What instead happened was the underground
market economy that existed before under the old system
became more of a dominant way in which they interacted,
and so that dominated Russia and they didn’t fiscally
decentralize. The way that I understand China, you can
correct me if I am wrong, is what happened there was
the original Deng Xiaping reforms were about worker
accountability, and that just exacerbated the problems
with the economic situation. So what ended up happening
is they adopted it where they switched the fiscal arrangements
around, and so you get these special economic zones,
which is a form of corporatism, not necessarily capitalism,
and they grow and they finance the center, and Russia
never had that.
A3: [Chow] China did not do much
political reform. So the Communist Party was still in
power, and they just did economic reform without much
political reform, so the party is still in power. Whereas
in the Russian case, the political, the Communist Party
was broken up, so there was no stable central government
to guide economic reform. People say that China did
economic reform first and maybe political reform later.
Whereas the order of the reforms in the Soviet Union
is the other way around. If history could be changed,
I think that Russia would have been better off if the
Communist Party had stayed in power and they did economic
reform step by step before changing the political system.
A4: [Cowen] I would think in the
Russian case the fact that they had a political empire
that was collapsing, that prompted all of their reforms,
meant they were getting political change first, whether
they liked it or not.
A5: [Chow] Yeah, that’s
right.
A6: [Cowen] And also, there was
the sense of wanting to be, or appear to be, European.
That’s how democracy, albeit of a strange kind,
came about. That cultural factor was much weaker in
China.
A: [Boettke] I had an opportunity
to interview Vladimir Dlouhy, who was one of the cabinet
ministers in the Czech Republic, this summer, and he
had a great line which he said to us, which was that
he’s somewhat pessimistic about the corruption
charges and all that stuff like that. He said, but if
you would have asked me in 1985 if the Czech Republic
in the year 2005 would be part of the European Union,
we would have a per capita income over $10,000, etc.,
I would have told you, you’re insane; there’s
no way we’re ever going to get that. And so when
you look back on these things you become actually very
optimistic. Jim Buchanan—Tyler’s [Cowen]
and my colleague—refers to himself as, he says,
“I’m an optimist when I look backwards and
a pessimist when I look forwards.” And I think
that’s probably accurate. In fact, I am writing
a paper right now. It’s called “Making a
Sausage,” which is about the Czech system. We
complain about all these problems, just as none of us
like to see a sausage being made, but if you look at
it this way, it looks like they actually did pretty
good.
A2: [Chow] One more point about
the Chinese case. I said a while ago the economic reform
was successful because China started with the transition
from a collective system to private farming. Now, China
collectivized in 1958, and 20 years later in 1978 they
privatized. So 20 years later the Chinese farmers still
knew how to farm. They’re still private farmers;
the 20-year-olds are only 40 years old. Whereas in the
former Soviet Union, collective farming had been around
so long that the Russian farmers didn’t know how
to be private farmers. They didn’t know how to
farm. And actually the Chinese farmer is very smart.
Through years of history, Chinese farmers really learned
how to do things. They knew how to do crop rotation.
They learned it from experience, so they’re good
farmers.
A3: [Milton Friedman] I’m
going to differ with Gregory [Chow] on this last one.
As I understand the figures, during the communist era,
one-third of all the food in Russia came from the private
plots that were attached to agriculture. So that suggests
that there was a population that knew how to farm. But
I think the big difference was that China did effectively
privatize farming, and as I understand, Russia to this
date has done very little along that line. The problem
of Russia vs. China is a very complicated one and we’re
not going to come to an answer to that. But I do think
one should not underestimate the role that was played
by the existence of an overseas Chinese. There’s
Chinese in Hong Kong, in Taiwan and in the United States,
and there was much more of a feeling of solidarity between
the overseas Chinese and China itself than there was
between the Russians and any overseas Russians. I think
that must have played a big role.
A4: [Chow] I agree completely.
Q: Would you comment also on the order
of reform in each of the countries, political versus
economic?
A: [Milton] Well, that’s
a very hard one, because it depends on what kind of
political reform you have. In the Czech Republic, Hungary
and so on, political reform came before economic reform,
and yet those were successful. So I don’t know
that you can make a universal statement. I do want to
make one other general statement about the whole subject
of this session and Capitalism and Freedom and Free
to Choose. In Capitalism and Freedom in particular,
we emphasized the relation between political and economic
freedom. I’ve since come to believe that the one
real defect that I would have liked to correct in that
book was the failure to include three types of freedom:
political freedom, economic freedom and civic freedom.
The example of Hong Kong really persuaded me that was
necessary. Hong Kong had no political freedom whatsoever.
But it did have almost complete civic freedom, that
is, freedom of speech, freedom of religion, etc., as
well as economic freedom. And it seems to me that mainland
China is moving in the same direction. It’s moving
toward a greater degree of civic freedom before it’s
moving to a greater degree of strictly political freedom.
And so I think, in general, all the discussion on these
issues would be enriched by thinking in terms of three
kinds of freedom rather than two.
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