C
Cruxis117
Guest
Keynes fantasy is to reduce interest rates in a boom to keep the boom. Another is to apply stimulus spending by governments – it has absolutely nothing to do with the Catholic Church.Why am I not surprised? Simple – the many identified errors in failing to know, and understand little, of Catholic social teaching and the development of the laws of economics by the Medieval Catholic schoolmen, has left a yawning chasm in understanding.
Dr Alejandro Chafuen is Peruvian born, and the newest edition of his most informative book is available as: *Faith and Liberty: The Economic Thought of the Late Scholastics *(Studies in Ethics and Economics), Lexington Books, 2003.
Useful references are:
Thomas E Woods, Jr., How The Catholic Church Built Western Civilization, Regnery 2005
The Church And The Market, Thomas E. Woods, Jr., Lexington Books, 2005
The Victory of Reason, Rodney Stark, Random House, 2005
Meltdown, Thomas E Woods, Jr., Regnery, 2009
Interested readers can access:
drwilliamluckey.com/
mises.org/daily/4310
thomasewoods.com/articles/
mises.org/articles.aspx
On Pope Benedict XVI’s *Caritas in Veritate *Fr. Robert Sirico, president and co-founder of the Acton Institute (U.S.A.), explains…“his encyclical contains no talk of seeking a third way between markets and socialism. [Italics added]. Words like greed and capitalism make no appearance here. But if they look to this document as a means for the moral reconstruction of the world’s cultures and societies, which in turn influence economic events, they will find much to reflect upon…. The pope is pointing to a path neglected in all the talk of economic stimulus, namely a global embrace of truth-filled charity. Benedict rightly attributes the crisis itself to ‘badly managed and largely speculative financial dealing.’ But he resists the current fashion of blaming all existing world problems on the market economy. Further: ‘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. More, not less, trade is needed: ‘the principal form of assistance needed by developing countries is that of allowing and encouraging the gradual penetration of their products into international markets.’…
Benedict does see a role for the state here [in wealth redistribution], but much of the needed redistribution is the result of every voluntary and mutually beneficial exchange.”
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Another falsehood… The Catholic Church realises that *“If I were to pronounce on any single matter of a prevailing economic problem, I should be interfering with the freedom of men to work out their own affairs. Certain cases must be solved in the domain of facts, case by case as they occur…[M]en must realise in deeds those things, the principles of which have been placed beyond dispute…[T]hese things one must leave to the solution of time and experience.” [Pope Leo XIII. Quoted in The Church And The Market, Dr Thomas E. Woods, Lexington Books, 2005, p 4].
Facing reality necessitates acknowledging and following Christ’s Church in understanding the nature of man and encouraging the right use of the laws of economics for the benefit of mankind, not any bozo intent on a selfist fantasy in denying what His Church clarifies.
So, I must ask, you believe that the Government should not interfere or regulate economy at all? Because everything that you state for some reason contradicts what I find in the CCC. Furthermore, it seems that you misunderstand Keynesian economics. He did not want to “keep the boom” and you erroneously suggest (showing a lack of education in economic theory) but wanted to shorten the drastic booms and busts that arose because of free enterprise without government economics). How is it a fantasy, if it works? (Wait, it worked…until Capitalists from America (for example, Chile and the so called “Chicago Boys”).
Refer to the Catechism of the Catholic Church, paragraph 2425.
I just don’t understand why you ignore the Great Depression and the recent recession, all examples of the failures of unchecked Capitalism and Free Trade. Many of the posters here have actually addressed things which you ignore, which you then primarily (but not completely) focus on my statements. This is how I see it- The Catholic Church condemns the atheistic ideologies attached to Socialism and Communism, but also reject leaving people to the whim and mercy of the Free Market. Why don’t you see that? It’s clearly stated there in what I have suggested to you. Are you suggesting that you actually do advocate government intervention and regulation of the economy? Because that puts you farther away from Capitalism, towards a Mixed Economy, which as worked for many countries, far better than Capitalism has for the U.S.
Oh, and to your last point, I merely wish to say that I agree, and I wish that you would realize that and stop advocating such a foolish system of economic theory (therefore ending your foolishness and recognizing that freedom includes responsibility to help the poor and the lowly. If FDR could (using the Socialist Concept of the New Deal) the American Economy out of the gutter (which also involved WWII), then you can realize that Pure Capitalism, without government regulation of the economy, fails utterly and completely.