didymus
Well, let’s keep in mind that no economic theory is really compatible with Christianity. Laissez-faire views such as those represented by the von Mises Institute are just as Godless as Marxism.
How strange!
Recall Pope John Paul II’s incisive analysis of Communism in his 1991 encyclical letter,
Centesimus Annus: that its “fundamental error” was “anthropological in nature.” How more forceful can you get?
Recall Pope John Paul II’s affirmation of free enterprise in
Centesimus Annus, 1991:
“CA 42. Returning now to the initial question: can it perhaps be said that, after the failure of Communism, capitalism is the victorious social system, and that capitalism should be the goal of the countries now making efforts to rebuild their economy and society? Is this the model which ought to be proposed to the countries of the Third World which are searching for the path to true economic and civil progress?
“The answer is obviously complex. If by ‘capitalism’ is meant an economic system which recognizes the fundamental and positive role of business, the market, private property and the resulting responsibility for the means of production, as well as free human creativity in the economic sector, then the answer is certainly in the affirmative, even though it would perhaps be more appropriate to speak of a ‘business economy’, ‘market economy’ or simply ‘free economy’.
“CA 43. The Church has no models to present;”
Free enterprise economic development started in the great Catholic monastic estates of the ninth century, and a solid basis of economic Catholic thought developed from the fourteenth century. In the fifteenth century the Late Scholastics who were Thomists (followers of St Thomas) “writing and teaching at the University of Salamanca in Spain, sought to explain the full range of human action and social; organization.” They “observed the existence of economic law, inexorable forces of cause and effect that operate very much as other natural laws. Over the course of several generations, they discovered and explained the laws of supply and demand, the cause of inflation, the operation of foreign exchange rates, and the subjective nature of economic value…” For these reasons Joseph Schumpeter applauded them as the first real economists. (Thomas E Woods Jr,
The Church And The Market, Lexington Books, 2005, p 8).
Dr Alejandro Chafuen clarifies that economics “is the study of the formal implications that can be deduced from the fact that human beings act purposively…economic science is value-free. It analyses cause and effect relationships that, if true, are scientific….(but) only human acts can be judged morally.
“Every scientific law that is a true statement is a natural law, something that human beings can understand but cannot alter. It is always useful for human beings to understand cause-and-effect relationships.” (
Christians For Freedom, Dr Alejandro Chafuen, Ignatius 1986, p 33-38).
In today’s world it is vital to explain what free enterprise is about. No wonder Pope Benedict XVI felt it necessary to teach that “Society does not have to protect itself from the market, as if the development of the latter were ipso facto to entail the death of authentically human relations…Therefore it is not the instrument that must be called to account, but individuals, their moral conscience and their personal and social responsibility.” (
Caritas et Veritate, Benedict XVI, 2009, #36)
The Church supports free enterprise, and these economic laws were discovered and developed by our Catholic Late Scholastics. Economics “is the study of the formal applications that can be deduced from the fact that human beings act purposefully. It does not consider whether these actions are good or bad (an ethical question). Economic science is value free. It analyses cause and effect relationships that, if true, are scientific….only human acts can be judged morally.” (Dr Alejandro Chafuen,
Christians For Freedom, Ignatius, 1986, p 33).
Fr James Sadowsky, S.J., professor emeritus of philosophy at Fordham University, expressed it well when he said that ethics is
prescriptive while economics is
descriptive. “Economics,” he says, “indicates the probable effects of certain policies, while ethics determines what one should do.” These are two very different things. [Dr Thomas E Woods, Jr., *The Church and the Market, Lexington Books, 2005, p 31].