The problem is today we are losing the moral sensibility and the transcendent reference point, that which yields not merely material prosperity but moral purpose and significance.
Forming a Society Worthy of Humans
Robert Sirico says that in order to get economics right, we must first understand what it means to be human.
Robert Sirico, a Catholic priest and co-founder of the Acton Institute,
is perhaps one of the most economically literate clergymen you will
find among America’s public intellectuals. While most seminaries do not
train future pastors and lay leaders to think theologically about
economics, Sirico says understanding questions about economics is
necessary if Christian leaders want to rightly seek the good of society
and train others to do the same. Joseph Gorra, founder and director of
Veritas Life Center, talked Sirico about economic life and human
flourishing.
At this year's Acton University conference,
you spoke on how love is an indispensable basis for economic life. To
some, that might seem odd if economic life is viewed as the maximization
of utility and material well-being.
We can’t enter the marketplace as something other than what we really
are, and real human love demonstrates the impossibility of being merely homo economicus (“the economic man”), which is essentially a thesis that reduces human beings to their materiality.
Humans are simultaneously material and transcendent, individual and
social. We are not merely individual entities, though we are uniquely
and unrepeatably that, even from the first moment of our conception. Yet
the whole of our lives we are social and individual, material and
spiritual. If we ignore this existential reality, then we fail to
understand what it means to be human.
Love—authentic human love—helps us understand this anthropological
reality. Even conjugal love offers more than physicality. In this act of
love, we offer our whole selves, including our ideals, dreams, and
indeed our future to one another—none of which exists in material
reality. Love, especially in the biblical sense, is not merely what one
wants for oneself, but is a free decision that wills the good of the
person one loves. And this transcendent act, this non-material dimension
of human anthropology—when open to new life—normatively results in
other human persons who are made from the dust of the earth and the
breath of life.
What is the most pervasive problem shaping our thinking related to economics and society?
In addition to the anthropological problem, people don’t think about
economics much at all. This may be because we live in the most advanced
economic society in history—including people in the developing world,
because even though their lives are much more economically difficult
than those in the developed world, they still live better than their
ancestors did. Many people think we can just live off the legacy of a
past prosperity; that we can live at the expense of everyone else. But
this illusion can last only so long, and if we don’t attend to the
dismal science of economics, we all will be in trouble.
Your book Defending the Free Market
is less of an unbridled endorsement for capitalism as much as it is the
moral case for a free economy. What can we gain by distinguishing freemarket from capitalism and then cronycapitalism?
I learned from my experiences in Latin America and Europe that the word capitalism
is fraught with misconceptions. It is, in the first place, a Marxist
word and is thus very narrow in its emphasis on the material. It refers
only to stuff in the economy. A free market—or better, a free
economy—refers to human action, where people make choices based on
subjective needs, both as producers and consumers.
Crony capitalism or State capitalism is the antithesis of a free
economy, which depends on favors from politicians to include or exclude
people from the circle of exchange. Even Adam Smith acknowledges this in
his Wealth of Nations, where he warns against this tendency.
Political analyst Yuval Levin said, “A capitalist system requires the
kind of citizen that it does not produce.” How would you respond?
I would agree, but only if by “capitalist system” Mr. Levin means one
that is without a moral understanding of enterprise, the rule of law,
clear rights to property and contract, and all those elements that went
into the development of the West. The problem is today we are losing the
moral sensibility and the transcendent reference point, that which
yields not merely material prosperity but moral purpose and
significance.
I am not promoting merely a free society, but one that is both free and virtuous. Only this is worthy of human beings.
There is a longstanding Main Street vs. Wall Street attitude that tends
to occupy the American popular imagination of pundits, politicians,
populists, and some pastors. Given your theology of work, vocation, and
economics, what is your take on that attitude?
The formation of a moral conscience within an entire industry
necessitates examining two aspects. The first recognizes the hard work
and creative endeavors of the many men and women who work in these
businesses. Their work has improved the entrepreneur’s capacity to raise
capital and allows common people to participate in some of history's
most successful enterprises by way of a stock market. We must also see
their work with full knowledge of the particulars. One could compare
this to a quantitative strategist creating a new financial product to an
automotive engineer devising a new vehicle safety system. Both exhibit a
creative human contribution to the service of others through trade.
The second aspect is to examine the ethics of business models that make
up this industry. Aside from debating interest rates and profits, few
theologians today would see a moral impediment to profitably lending
money to your neighbor. The real moral questions arise when our system
of fractional reserve banking allows the financing industry to operate
money with such economic exception. In many contexts, we have less of a
Wall Street investor problem and more of a regulatory capture problem.
It’s appropriate that people regard some Wall Street activities as
immoral business, and I the think most beneficial thing to do going
forward is help people understand the nature of sound money and its
important role in our economy.
In recent years, high frequency trading has often dominated criticisms
of Wall Street. What are the challenges we face in understanding this
convergence of information technology advances, markets, and sometimes
predatory activities?
The complexity of the trading activity creates situations that are
sometimes difficult to distinguish as predatory or simply highly
competitive.
Much high frequency trading is an outgrowth of a more antiquated market
structure by which brokers and market makers operated a standard share
distribution model intending to assist firms in raising capital, as well
as to provide investors liquidity and reduce counter-party risk. High
frequency trading could become predatory if relationships from the old
market model prevent new participants from competing in a transparent
and freely accessed marketplace, which can occur in a variety of
circumstances. Not the least of which is when a distortion of free
markets occur as political favoritism plays a significant role—through
bailouts, for instance. Unlike the implication one often finds in many
news headlines, it’s not the speed of trading as much as the quality,
transparency, and freedom of the marketplace that will allow us to
determine the moral fruits of this endeavor.
What blind spots do those on either the political right or left have in
understanding inequality and poverty as a problem to be solved?
Both sides tend to leave out an aspect of reality. Those on the right
believe the illusion that all that matters is economic efficiency, as
though human beings do not matter. This fails because humans are also
consumers who need to be able to purchase the goods and services being
offered—which Henry Ford seemed to understand. And more importantly,
workers are human beings; they have certain rights simply because they
are humans, even if those rights aren’t the sole responsibility of
employers.
Those on the left have a utopian dream in which everyone can be the
same. But the very fact of human individuality shows its impossibility.
Underlying the call for equality in the material sense is the moral
desire that people be able to live at a certain basic level of material
dignity. It’s probably better to call this equity. Hence, we must speak about the floor in an economic sense, not the gap—much less the ceiling.
Regarding poverty, the image that comes to mind is a pie. If we think
the world of riches is static, then we will see the normative solution
as dividing it up—or redistribution. If, on the other hand, we see the
pie as capable of being grown—that is, production—then the normative
solution is economic liberty and initiative, which produce prosperity.
Acton’s curriculum Poverty Cure, designed especially for churches, makes
the case that at the international level, trade should be preferred,
both morally and economically, over aid.
What is a moral case against raising a federal minimum wage as a way to alleviate poverty?
This is a well-debated topic in the economic literature, and I have no
doubt that most people on all sides have the best of intentions. But
there are several prudential reasons for shunning federally mandated
minimum wages.
First, salaries are not arbitrary. They reflect what the business owner
knows to cover the costs of production, which are usually under tight
margins. If employers are forced by law to inflate wages to rates above
the market rate, then either the costs are passed on to the consumers
who also work for a living, or the least productive employees—most often
minorities and teenagers—or those who were hired last are the first
ones to be fired, lest the whole enterprise collapses. As a result,
entrance into the world of work will be more difficult for those
starting out, and they’ll never acquire habits of enterprise.
Additionally, if a minimum wage is a moral requirement of society as a
whole, why should it be that the burden falls only on employers as
opposed to something more akin to an earned income tax credit whereby
people receive from society—at whatever level of government deemed
prudent—a kind of negative income refund. I think this latter policy has
its own problems, but it appears more just than singling out employers.
Finally, why would such a thing need to be federally imposed when wage
differentials vary?
So does paying a living wage meet the same objections as raising the
minimum wage if a living wage is not regulated but at the discretion of a
company to determine what is a just wage?
I do think that a living wage—an idea developed in the mid-16th
century, which the Scholastics believed was best achieved by the market
wage—is what people are looking for. I think it’s more prudent because a
market wage will more closely respond to a living wage, generally
because there’s more information available to all partners—employers,
worker, and consumers—if the pricing structure is free from obfuscating
governmental regulations.
Christians who are well formed in their moral obligations may well
choose to pay above the federal minimum. When hiring in my parish, even
for simple and temporary work, we haven’t paid a minimum wage in years.
Probably the most dramatic example, though not very much reported on, is
Hobby Lobby, which has paid its lowest wage earning employees multiples
of the minimum wage for quite some time.
What can local churches and pastors do to help address short-term and
long-term unemployment issues? Or is this something only policymakers
and the business community can address?
Historically, churches have played a critical role in addressing these
sort of questions, and I believe they still can, though not merely
through direct charitable initiatives—which should be a given in any
Christian society, in addition to the moral formation we’re called to
offer people. To do this, we must think like business leaders, but whose
bottom line need not be monetary.
Specific kinds of work training efforts imbued with moral sensibility
would be one way to do this, which businesses operating under all kinds
of regulations might find difficult. Imagine what it would look like if
after two or three years of operation a church got the reputation of
turning out workers from the church’s vocation training school, people
who were not only highly proficient in their respective field, but also
carried themselves with a sense of professionalism, honesty, and respect
that made their employees desirable on the market for their habit of
punctuality, politeness, and giving a real day’s work for a real day’s
wage.
And what if our organizations developed from within the congregations
and constituencies the kinds of insurance programs for health care,
unemployment insurance, small loans for work related costs, and even
supplemental wage assistance for disadvantaged people just starting a
job, which some undeniably need. To the extent that our organizations
become politicized and secularized, they will dissolve and lose their
Christian identity.
I can hear the question forming in some minds: Well, isn’t that the job
of government, and don’t these programs exist through various welfare
schemes? There are two critical differences. First, the people involved
in creating these programs and holding their participants to account
within them would be people known to them. This accounts for much of the
success of micro-loan efforts in India and Latin America.
Second—and here I call the church to particular account—we would need
to ground such programs in a clear moral foundation. As Christians, we
should seek to form men and women who are not merely workers, but
prepare them to be evangelists as well, since they’ve had a profound
personal encounter with the living Christ. Try getting that kind of
program funded by the present welfare establishment.
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