That’s what the State is there for – just laws as we have stated over and over, not for finagling.
The state should be somewhat subsidiary but details of the extent of the state’s regulation or interference are not exactly a religious matter, or even a moral one, they are a matter of political doctrine and practice. Catholics can have diverging opinions and fair bit of legitimate difference may exist in between.
That’s called prejudice, and what is required is a careful understanding of economics and the Church’s social teaching and the wise, prudent, just and temperate application of these principles with fortitude.
BTW an enterprise is a cooperation of employees, managers and investors for supplying goods and services that a people require at a price they are willing to pay. Not enough understand that.
There’s nothing wrong with having one’s own enterprise and employees and regarding the enterprise as an enterprise and employees as employees, as opposed to treating employes like equity partners. On the other hand, it is somewhat superior (while it shouldn’t be required) to equip employees with more responsibility and perhaps some participation in the profits, indeed treating them like partners (not in the legal sense but in the colloquial sense) in whatever one is doing. What is wrong is when abuse starts and people are getting exploited, that is, the wage isn’t fair.
Since you mentioned people being willing to pay, “willing to pay” is frequently misunderstood. Just because someone will accept the deal it doesn’t mean the deal is fair. It may mean that the deal is the best available option. As Catholics, we owe our neighbours more than the best available deal (out of bad ones). As a minimum we can’t content ourselves with mere consent received from our contractual parties and rest assured that everything is okay since they accepted and didn’t have a gun to their head. This is something that enthusiasts of capitalism frequently miss.
As far as I believe, there is also a general problem in a system in which the rich are getting richer and the poor poorer and/or there are bariers to the growth of new enterprises e.g. due to the lack of capital or lack of sway with the local authorities, or prevention of upstart competition by established enterprises. While I seriously dislike that kind of systems, this is more economy and politics than morality (we need to remember the Church worked with slave economies, worked with monarchies, worked with feudal economies, changing them from the inside as opposed to a revolution), but I suppose there is a moral angle too (it’s just that freedom for new people to get rich isn’t a top priority moral concern (as opposed to e.g. their ability to work and receive enough salary to support a family, which actually is a top moral concern)).
In fact the question of a just wage has been discussed in On wage fixing, by Fr Brian Harrison, O.S., in *Religious Liberty And Contraception *(John XXXIII Fellowship Co-op (Australia), 1988, p 22-23), concerning “the practical order: human rights and duties.
Without doubting Father’s credentials, I’m not exactly sure that what I read in the quote is perfectly consistent with the social teaching of the Church the way I see it.
(An obvious example of such a doctrine would be the teaching – both natural and revealed – that a labourer deserves a just wage.)”
Everybody deserves justice. To do injustice, e.g. to fail to pay for the work done by a worker, is a sin. A labourer deserves payment. It cannot be said that an employer who himself is struggling owes his employees comfortable wages. However, that the wage should allow the worker to support his family is basically Magisterial teaching that cannot be trumped by a book written by a theologian.
Also, from Gospel itself it should be clear that it’s not okay for an employer to go about hiring people at the lowest salary he can get away with paying them due to the adverse economic conditions that will force them to accept whatever they can get. This said, it is better if they receive
anything as opposed to having no opportunity to earn a single penny. However, it is immoral for the employer to exploit his employees. It was also immoral for a feudal lord to abuse his serfs and it was immoral for a slave owner to abuse his slaves or a master to abuse his servants. It is immoral for parents to abuse their children.
The problem I see with capitalism is not free market per se or entrepreneurship or anything of the kind. Those are just the new bourgeois reality, focused on trade and business, which has replaced the previous reality controlled by noblemen and focused on war, genealogy and land ownership. Myself, I am a business owner, regardless that I’m not a big fan of this whole bourgeois thing. The problem I see with capitalism, or rather
in capitalism, is how people try to justify unfair dealings with formal consent from the other party and lack of overt compulsion in the negotiation process. Social responsibility associated with ownership also tends to be forgotten.