Moral Responsibility Is Key to Economic Recovery
NEW HAVEN,
Connecticut, June 26, 2009, 14.30 Hrs (Carl Anderson / Zenit.org):
Shortly
after the fall of European communism two decades ago, then Czech
President Vaclav Havel addressed his nation on the importance
of individual responsibility within an economic system.
Speaking
of the failure of communism, he said: "We live in a morally
contaminated environment. We fell morally ill because we became
used to saying something different from what we thought. We
learned not to believe in anything, to ignore each other, to
care only about ourselves. […] We have to understand this
legacy as a sin we committed against ourselves. […] If
we realize this, hope will return to our hearts."
Today, with
the world economy in the midst of a deep recession, and with
pundits and politicians debating a variety of proposed legal
or technical corrections, we would do well to keep Havel's words
of individual moral responsibility in mind as a necessary part
of any real solution.
When he
spoke in 1990, the world had just watched transfixed as the
Iron Curtain fell in Europe. Indeed, one of the two financial
and political systems that had defined most of the 20th century
almost instantaneously disappeared from the European continent.
The idea
of atheistic communism as a viable economic force had been debunked,
leading at least one commentator to proclaim that "the
end of history" was at hand.
But as Benedict
XVI has pointed out in many contexts, triumphalism is dangerous.
Lessons
learned
Now, as
we face an economic crisis of enormous proportions, we cannot
simply celebrate the two-decade anniversary of the demise of
the Eastern Bloc, we must also look at what went wrong in our
economy, and how we can repair it.
The importance
of each individual's moral decision-making will be critical
if we are to succeed.
There were
a few, in the days before -- and immediately after -- the collapse
of Soviet Communism, who were prescient enough to have predicted
trouble ahead for Western economies, if they ignored morality.
Their words are all the more relevant today.
Two men
in particular stand out for their foresight: Karol Wojtyla and
Joseph Ratzinger.
While decrying
the "determinism" of Marxism, and its atheistic outlook
in a 1985 paper "Market, Economy and Ethics," Benedict
XVI, then Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, warned that an economic
crisis in the West was possible. His concern was a decline of
ethics in economic matters.
In fact,
he warned that a decline of ethics "born and sustained
only by strong religious convictions" could actually "cause
the laws of the market to collapse."
Shortly
after the walls began coming down in 1991, Pope John Paul II,
widely recognized for the role he played in the collapse of
communism, also warned against a market economy that excluded
spiritual values.
He made
clear that a system that sought to replace Marxism with consumerism
-- and thus reduced "man to the sphere of economics and
the satisfaction of material needs" -- in the end both
made the same error as a central tenet of Marxism and was not
an adequate solution ("Centesimus Annus," 19).
Both Benedict
XVI and John Paul II have made clear that any economic system
that pushes God and morality aside rests not on bedrock, but
on sand.
As Cardinal
Ratzinger wrote in his 1985 paper: "Even if the market
economy does rest on the ordering of the individual within a
determinate network of rules, it cannot make man superfluous
or exclude his moral freedom from the world of economics. […]
These spiritual powers are themselves a factor in the economy:
The market rules function only when a moral consensus exists
and sustains them."
Greed
and ambition
Earlier
this year, a Knights of Columbus-Marist Survey found that at
least 90% of Americans -- and 90% of executives -- believe that
business leaders see career advancement and personal financial
gain as primary motivations for business decisions. Only 31%
of Americans and 32% of executives believed that "the public
good" was a strong motivating factor.
The same
poll also showed that three-quarters of Americans and more than
nine out of 10 executives believe a business can be both ethically
run, and successful.
Little wonder
that a subsequent poll showed that Americans -- and American
Catholics especially -- value Benedict XVI's opinion on both
economic and spiritual issues. By overwhelming margins they
are interested in what he has to say about the shortsightedness
of greed and selfishness, and the building of a society where
spiritual values play an important role.
Much pain
could have been avoided if the individual members of our economy
had heeded our Pope's words in 1985, or his predecessor's in
1991, and if capitalism with a conscience had been the norm.
Let us pray
that people pay more attention when Benedict XVI's new social
encyclical is released, and that the solutions our politicians
and pundits consider will not only transcend the technical and
legal, but also include the ethical.