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Stephanie Slade on markets, planning, and Catholic social teaching
Religion & Liberty Online

Stephanie Slade on markets, planning, and Catholic social teaching

by Dan Hugger • November 25, 2019

Stephanie Slade writes in next month’s edition of Reason Magazine about, ‘Regulation and ‘the Right Ordering of Economic Life” according to Catholic social teaching:

The Church’s surprising lesson for partisans of big government is that the best tools for correctly ordering economic life are found in the choices of individual market actors. Because those choices are based not only on their preferences but also on their convictions, people’s moral sensibilities—the extent to which they believe they have ethical obligations to each other—have a powerful and unavoidable effect on the shape of the economy. Contrary to what you might expect, Catholic social teaching suggests that this, not public policy, performs the first and most important regulatory function in a free society.

The popes of the last century have been clear that when they speak out against unregulated liberal capitalism, they’re referring to a system in which all involved are concerned solely with their own material advantage and will happily sacrifice others in the pursuit thereof. Per the Catechism of the Catholic Church, “A theory that makes profit the exclusive norm and ultimate end of economic activity is morally unacceptable.”

The piece is thoughtful, well reasoned, and interesting throughout. Please do read the whole thing!

 

Dan Hugger

Dan Hugger

Dan Hugger is Librarian and Research Associate at the Acton Institute.

Posted in Bible and Theology, Christian Social Thought, Church and State, Civic Engagement, Economic Freedom, Economics, Economics and Social Problems, Entrepreneurship, Free Enterprise, Government, History, Intellectuals, Limited Government, Political Culture, Politics, Regulation

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