The Catholic Church
does not claim teaching authority on matters of economics and finance. When the
Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace issues a statement on the world’s
financial markets, faithful Catholics are not bound to accept the economic
analysis it contains.
However, it would
be rash and wrong to say that the Church should remain silent about economic
questions. Economic decisions have their moral dimensions, on which the Church
does have expertise and teaching authority. There are many lessons that
financiers could learn from Church teaching:
·
that
neither majority votes nor marketplace decisions can settle moral questions;
·
that
utilitarian standards are inadequate to define the common good;
·
that
private property carries a “social mortgage”those who own goods have a moral
obligation to use them wisely;
·
that
the affluent have a duty to care for their brothers in need.
Good points, all.
Yes, the Church really does have lessons to teach the financial world. That’s
why Catholic social teaching is important.
However, while
economists are learning from the Vatican, perhaps the Vatican might learn a few
lessons from economic analysts. Just for instance:
·
that
government does not create anything, and therefore does not have funds unless
it obtains those funds from ordinary people: taxpayers;
·
that
the world’s financial system is currently endangered because of the soaring
level of government debt;
·
that
regulatory agencies have an abysmal record of failure in protecting the public
from market fluctuations, speculative bubbles, and even outright fraudand it
is only reasonable to expect that a worldwide authority would reproduce those
failures on a global scale;
·
that
government interventions in the markets invariably produce unintended
consequences, many of them deleterious;
·
that
government regulation invariably furnishes opportunities for powerful
corporations to manipulate the market for their own purposes, to the detriment
of the general welfare.
Those are the
economic lessons. There are some political realities that the Vatican might
eventually recognize, too. Say:
·
that
the UN, the World Bank, the European Union, and other international
organizations are not friends of the Catholic Church, and probably never will
be;
·
that
any international agency empowered to regulate financial markets willfollowing
a pattern that is now well establishedbe exploited by social engineers to
promote contraception, legal abortion, and legal recognition of same-sex
marriage;
·
that
liberal politicians will gladly accept and exploit the Vatican’s statements on
economic affairs, while continuing to work assiduously to promote the culture
of death;
Oh, yes, and most
important of all:
When an obscure Vatican agency issues a
statement that contains 50 percent solid Catholic social teaching, and 50
percent flaky leftist theory, the world’s media will ignore the distinctively
Catholic contentwhat the Church should say, what the world should
learnand concentrate exclusively on the leftist theory. So for the great mass
of ordinary readers, who will never read the full document, but only scan the
headlines, the important message will be lost. What will register, instead, is
that the Vatican has not learned its lessons about economic affairs and
political realities.
When people reach
the conclusion that the Vatican is talking nonsense, they do not ordinarily
distinguish between the sound fundamental principles of Church teaching and the
questionable economic analysis that follows. Nor do they make fine distinctions
on the different levels of Church teaching authority. They conclude simply that
the Vatican talks nonsense. So by reaching beyond their field of expertise,
Vatican officials undermine their own teaching authority.
Does anyone
seriously believe that when the leaders of the G-20 economic powers gathered in
November in Cannes they spent any time examining the Vatican’s plans for the
recapitalization of troubled banks? Of course not. The world’s leaders have
plenty of their own expert economists; they need not rely on analysis from
Vatican dicasteries. If they think that the new Vatican document is just one
more call for international economic regulationalong the lines of many other
proposals they have already seenthey are likely to ignore the statement
entirely, and thus miss the important messages that a terse Vatican document
might have conveyed.
The moral of the story: If you want to promote Catholic social teaching,
don’t wander beyond your expertise. Stick to moral principles, and leave
economic analysis to the economists.