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aball1035
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How did Capitalism differ from (very broadly) when Europe was most Catholic (1200 or so) to now?
What was the economic system in the middle ages?There was no capitalism then. Capitalism is a new system that emerged in the late 17th century (after the Protestant revolt).
I think you might find an answer to what our system would look like if it were Catholic by reading some of Chesterton’s works on distributism. Distributism offers a Catholic alternative to the false choice between socialism and capitalism.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Distributism
The Protestant Revolt had nothing to do with capitalism. The industrial revolution marked the beginning of what we call capitalism.There was no capitalism then. Capitalism is a new system that emerged in the late 17th century (after the Protestant revolt).
I think you might find an answer to what our system would look like if it were Catholic by reading some of Chesterton’s works on distributism. Distributism offers a Catholic alternative to the false choice between socialism and capitalism.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Distributism
It was less complex, to be sure, but I am not persuaded it was greatly different in its basic nature. There were massive producers of basic commodities like wool in England, cod in the Baltic, honey and wax from Russia and Ukraine, wine in France and Italy. They were bought, shipped, and sold by traders much like today. They had shipping insurance. Foreign luxuries were imported at various centers like Venice and Constantinople, and shipped everywhere. Significant manufactories existed for mass production of all sorts of things; glass and weaponry in Italy, leather and steel in Spain, textiles in what are now the “Low countries”. Various governmental entities taxed trade. Banking was very big. Banks issued loans, letters of credit, drawing rights, etc. There was considerable cross-border freedom in trade and lending. All sorts of nationalities were represented in the great trading and shipping centers.How did Capitalism differ from (very broadly) when Europe was most Catholic (1200 or so) to now?
Feudalism.What was the economic system in the middle ages?
If I could add to this just a little, perhaps. I think it’s reasonable to say feudalism was PART of the economic system in the Middle Ages. But depending on how one defines the Middle Ages, it was rather short-lived as a pervasive institution, though its minimal history was quite long, dating from Roman times into the 20th Century. The term itself was coined only in the 17th century.Feudalism.
Capitalism, broadly speaking, will last until Gabriel blows his horn, because it’s simply what people do to the extent they are allowed to do it. People will exert effort for the material benefit of themselves and at least attempt to control the transfers of their wealth. At the core, it may be expressed as IL + IP=C +T. (Income from labor + Income from Property = Consumption + Transfers) Any one of those factors can be interfered with in some manner, particularly “T” (transfers). We naturally want to transfer to our spouses, our children, our Church, additional “P”, various charities and neighbors we know. Government wants more transfers to it, so it can choose the transferees instead, and for the reasons it chooses. But no matter what, the formula remains the same and always has. Understanding that, the Social Encyclicals encourage growth of IP on the individual and family level, and a great deal of freedom of “T”. It also encourages reasonable “IL” and modest “C”.I think capitalism is going to have a shorter lifespan than feudalism. It’s already rolling over in our own time and is far less stable than feudalism.
I would also add that there is no such thing as a perfect state for an economic system. There was no one state of feudalism any more than there is one state of capitalism. These things evolve over time. Then some equilibrium breaks, there is an economic upset, and a new system emerges. It grows and evolves over some period of time, and then it too is replaced.
Capitalism is newer than that even.There was no capitalism then. Capitalism is a new system that emerged in the late 17th century (after the Protestant revolt).
Before Henry VIII dissolved the monasteries, the Church actually fulfilled a huge role in terms of charity, education and healthcare. Some orders of monks owned land which they either cultivated themselves, or collected rent on, and used this money or produce to support the poor, run schools and the like. The dissolution of the monasteries led to an immediate increase in homeless and destitute people. At the same time, it created many new super-rich people, as the land was sold off, frequently below value, and bought by new merchant landowners who were not interested in continuing the charitable work of the previous owners. The evolution of today’s libertarianism, with its calls for curtialing healthcare and social projects so the rich pay fewer taxes, can be seen in a straight line from that.The definitions are vague and people use them differently.
IMO, the problem we have today in modern capitalism is that technology and laissez faire government policy have combined to enable dehumanizing systems to be constructed for purpose of extracting maximum short term profits without adequate consideration of all the long term costs.
In simpler terms, a community of 50 pig farmers, that each own 100 acres and live and raise their families there is far more likely to care about the long term viability of his farming techniques than is the MBA consultant advising MegaFarm Intl, Inc that operates a 5,000 acre swine factory farm. Not to mention the commitment of overall community quality, schools, etc.
Distributism is the idea that tax and policy should be set to offset the dehumanizing tendencies of capitalism. Companies with a larger total revenue should pay higher tax rates than those with lower total revenue. Dividend income should be taxed the same as wages. There should be an estate tax. Property taxes should be levied on a stepped scale that increases the rate by the total value of land owned (in aggregate, not by parcel).
Things like this would tend to offset the advantages currently enjoyed by the Walmarts of the world and allow Joe’s pharmacy to actually compete on an even basis. Then there would be far less need for confiscatory redistribution schemes (welfare, food stamps, public housing, etc).
The usurpation of charitable endeavors by government and those it favors, to the disadvantage of the poor, is what we saw then, and what we’re seeing now. Henry VIII took a lot of that wealth himself and, yes, sold a lot of it to his supporters at bargain basement prices. We saw the ultimate of that in the Soviet era, when the government strictly forbade churches from doing charitable works because “it is the government’s function” to do that. Ultimately, the Bolsheviks wouldn’t even allow churches to sell valuables to aid the starving, again under the same pretext, and simply confiscated the valuables. The proceeds didn’t go to feed the starving, however.Before Henry VIII dissolved the monasteries, the Church actually fulfilled a huge role in terms of charity, education and healthcare. Some orders of monks owned land which they either cultivated themselves, or collected rent on, and used this money or produce to support the poor, run schools and the like. The dissolution of the monasteries led to an immediate increase in homeless and destitute people. At the same time, it created many new super-rich people, as the land was sold off, frequently below value, and bought by new merchant landowners who were not interested in continuing the charitable work of the previous owners. The evolution of today’s libertarianism, with its calls for curtialing healthcare and social projects so the rich pay fewer taxes, can be seen in a straight line from that.
Capitalism was in its infancy ca. 1500. There was just feudalism back then.How did Capitalism differ from (very broadly) when Europe was most Catholic (1200 or so) to now?
Very true.But morally, both are bankrupt.
I think you and I would completely agree, with perhaps a shading here and there. Capitalism as we know it presently does, indeed, have a lot of corporate welfare in it. But it isn’t necessary or inherent to capitalism. Socialism is, if anything, even worse in that regard. One of the things that aids oligopoly in this country is the drive to the “regulatory state” espoused by the left. It aids oligopoly because the big corporations, by and large, write the rules, and they write them in their favor. The government then enforces those rules. Both left and right permit this because both depend on the money contributed by the “bigs” to keep them in power. However, it is my belief that the left is worse in that regard because it has high-octane regulatory inclinations as part of its fundamental totalitarian instincts. It is also more shameless, as misuse of “stimulus” money and some of the recent scandals appear to demonstrate.Very true.
Real existing capitalism has always featured a massive amount of state assistance to the powerful at the expense of real competition. A market based way to reach distributist goals would be to end the corporate welfare system we have in place now, which would reduce the size of corporate oligopoly and allow for more, decentralized competition. I’ve never seen distributists advocate state-based seizure and redistribution of property (as mark mentioned) but I suppose it’s possible. I’ve seen some Catholic libertarians say while abortion is wrong the state can’t legitimately prohibit it. Hypocrisy and non-Catholic ideas are prevalent in our culture.
Catholic social teaching, of which the principle of subsidiarity is a key idea, does not forbid state involvement in the economy in certain contexts, and is not against, for instance, welfare for the needy or even public health care systems (brief passage in Laborem Exercens on that). That is why I lean toward distributism: it keeps in place the legitimacy of private property which the Church teaches, while also pointing out that Catholicism doesn’t mean economic anarchism.
I think you and I agree a lot. The corporate leanings of the Democrats (and other left or near-left parties elsewhere) bother me as well. I remember an article I read some years ago about the then friendly attitudes of some big business leaders towards public health care because it would reduce private business spending. And what you said about big business writing the rules in their favor is something I have gone on about at length to friends of mine for years. The “pagan worship of the state” that Pius XI spoke of is definitely aided and abetted by the left more so than the right.I think you and I would completely agree, with perhaps a shading here and there. (edited for space)