Finally, a Pope who will speak the truth on the dangers of money worship and unregulated capitalism. Now, if he would please define “unregulated capitalism.”
Yes, I agree, very good question, one I’ve had many times myself. For a long time, I wondered if the Church had failed to provide meaningful guidance on this question.
Then I finally started reading the Vatican’s 2004 document “Compendium of the Social Doctrine of the Church.”
vatican.va/roman_curia/pontifical_councils/justpeace/documents/rc_pc_justpeace_doc_20060526_compendio-dott-soc_en.html
This Compenium does, I think, in essence, give a pretty good sense of what “regulated” means in the context of “regulated Capitalism.” After reading it, and reflecting on it, I felt that I had a pretty good sense of what the Church’s moral teachings on economics are.
The Church has so many documents on its “Social Doctrine” that reading and studying them all is very time consuming. The popes, the bishops conferences, and the Second Vatican Council (in Guadium et Spes) have all produced documents. My guess is that there are about 12 key documents of this sort one would have to read to get a full and balanced view of the Church’s teachings on the morality of and benefits of Capitalism and of the moral necessity for governments to regulate Capitalism for the common good.
The 2004 “Compendium of the Social Doctrine of the Church” provides an official Vatican summary of all these documents (except for the social doctrine encyclicals of the current pope), and it is, I think, easy to understand is not very long.
This Compendium answers many other common sense questions, such as whether the Church’s social doctrine teaching are really binding on Catholics, and whether they are really “moral” teachings or not.
God bless you. God bless us all.
P.S. Here’s a bit of my conclusions about why the Pope’s comments against unregulated Capitalism are relevant and important:
The USA does not have “unregulated capitalism” now. I think everyone agrees with that. Perhaps most would agree that it did have unregulated capitalism in the era of President Jackson, and maybe for all of the history of the USA prior to President Theodore Roosevelt (the first anti-monopoly laws went into effect then, I believe), and that from that time forward capitalism gradually was more and more regulated up until the time of President Reagan. Since President Reagan’s time, most people, I think, would say that the regulation of Capitalism has not changed that much.
So, it seems to me, that no one could correctly say that Pope Benedict’s condemnation of “unregulated capitalism” would not and could not constitute a condemnation of the regulatory situation in USA currently.
Pope Benedict’s condemnation probably applies mostly to Russia, China and India, where workers (and most citizens in general) have no real rights, and many (or most?) are little better than slaves.
But, Pope Benedict’s condemnation still has much relevance to the USA because there is a powerful movement in the USA that repeats, over and over, a simple formula for America to follow: SMALL GOVERNMENT PLUS CAPITALISM UNLEASHED. The people in this movement do not generally directly say that they want capitalism to completely unregulated, but, I think the impression that most people get is that businesses and employees need to be utterly and totally free from government interference in their free choices. So, in essence, this movement is a movement calling for the “unregulated Capitalism” that the Catholic Church views as being immoral. Even worse, there are some lay Catholics in this movement who proclaim that the Catholic Church, because it is and has always been anti-Communist, is therefore in favor of unregulated Capitalism, as if our only choice is between the social doctrine of Marx, Stalin, Lenin and Mao, and the social doctrine of Washington, Jefferson, Madison, and Hamilton.
Consider this quote from the Compendium:
- The Church’s social doctrine, while recognizing the market as an irreplaceable instrument for regulating the inner workings of the economic system, points out the need for it to be firmly rooted in its ethical objectives, which ensure and at the same time suitably circumscribe the space within which it can operate autonomously.[729] The idea that the market alone can be entrusted with the task of supplying every category of goods cannot be shared, because such an idea is based on a reductionist vision of the person and society.[730] Faced with the concrete “risk of an ‘idolatry’ of the market”, the Church’s social doctrine underlines its limits, which are easily seen in its proven inability to satisfy important human needs,…
Thus, if anyone says that the Free Market alone can meet the basic needs of all hardworking, responsible people, and that poor people just need to stop being so lazy and so dependent on government, a Catholic can quote passages like above to say that the Church says such a view is both immoral and empirically incorrect as a matter of economic science.