Social and economic ethics.
Hinze, Christine Firer
LABOR IN THE FIELDS of social and economic ethics over the past
several years has yielded a rich and varied harvest. New treatments of
Catholic social teaching have appeared. (1) The continuing war in Iraq
has prompted writings on violence, including journal issues focused on
torture and on terrorism. (2) Scholars have addressed debt and trade
disparities, rising economic inequality, a world food crisis, and the
scourge of HIV/AIDS, all of which have impeded progress toward the
United Nations' Millennium Development Goals, especially the first:
to halve extreme poverty rates globally by 2015. (3) The 40th
anniversary of the death of Martin Luther King Jr. and Barack
Obama's election to the U.S. presidency add interest to recent work
on racial justice that includes scholarship on King's legacy, and
on white privilege's deleterious influences on theology and
society. (4)
In 2008, compelling signs of the times clustered around economics.
Continuing market turmoil raises pressing and multifaceted issues for
contemporary Christian economic ethics and practice. Mindful of recent
contributions on globalization (5) and on consumerism (6) in these
pages, I here consider economic ethics, focusing on Catholic ethical
approaches to the financial crisis of 2008.
Beginning in 2006, falling U.S. real estate values and the collapse
of the subprime mortgage market exposed an epidemic of overleveraging in
financial credit markets. Faced with dramatic declines in collateral
values and weakening ability to back their credit products, major
financial institutions faltered. Many historically stable companies were
forced to offer themselves for sale at bargain prices, petition for huge
government bailouts, or declare bankruptcy. In autumn 2008, despite
injections of funds by the United States and other countries, an
enormous breakdown of trust in credit and markets swept through the
global economy. The results have been described as the worst financial
crisis since the Great Depression. At this writing, its cascading
impacts on national, local, and household economies, most especially
already poverty-stricken regions and families, were only beginning to be
seen.
CHRISTIAN ETHICAL ANALYSIS AND THE FINANCIAL CRISIS
Christian economic-ethical inquiry is a complex activity with
intellectual as well as practical and sapiential aspirations. (7) It
navigates fundamental questions concerning theological and moral
anthropology; the impact of finitude and sin (along with grace) upon
economic relations (and upon scholarly attempts to decipher and evaluate
these relations); and the demands of human dignity and solidarity. In
addressing economic problems, ethicists must adjudicate among competing
economic, ethical, and theological theories and opinions and draw from
these sources coherent, religiously-warranted moral arguments--taking
account of the influence of ideology, social location, and power on
which voices and whose concerns are privileged, and which are muted or
marginalized in their sources and in their own work. (8)
The modern Roman Catholic social tradition addresses both perennial
issues and the "new things" that mark a rapidly changing,
global economy. The dynamics and dysfunctions of 21st-century financial
markets, however unprecedented or recondite, thus fall firmly within the
Church's analytic and evaluative purview. The 2004 Compendium of
the Social Doctrine of the Church acknowledges globalization's
achievements and potential, but also warns of the threats to human
well-being (no. 362) of an economy in which financial markets have
become "ever more decisive and central" (no. 361). As the
ensuing remarks (nos. 362-76) show, a normative understanding of
economy's purpose--namely, to serve human dignity and material
well-being--and a set of principles grounded in this purpose orient
Catholic ethical analyses of contemporary finance. (9)
First, a principle of intelligibility affirms that social and
economic processes and structures are subject to human comprehension.
Ethical analysis thus begins by seeking an accurate understanding of
financial markets, how they work, and what has gone awry. This
descriptive work requires critical familiarity with pertinent economic
theories, concepts, and debates. (10)
The recent market crisis can be traced to financiers' turning
to the booming mortgage market in their efforts develop high-yield,
stable-risk investment products to offer to "the giant pool of
money," more precisely, the fixed securities market, which grew at
unprecedented speed after 2000. In response to intense demand, there was
an explosion of new financial instruments known as
"over-the-counter credit derivatives." (11) Two credit
derivative products, funded "collateralized debt obligations"
(CDOs) and unfunded "credit default swaps" (CDSs), were
central in the lead-up to the 2008 crisis.
A collateralized debt obligation is built from a mortgage-backed
security, which is a pool or bundle of mortgages. That bundle is cut
into slices. Depending on the quality of the mortgage pools they are cut
from, slices ("tranches") are deemed higher or lower risk.
Regularly, higher and lower-risk slices were pooled and sliced again.
Credit rating agencies, using complex predictive computer modeling,
frequently gave the top (and even middle) slices of these pools credit
ratings of AAA: low risk--as "good as money." (12)
Credit default swaps, introduced in the 1990s, are, at their
simplest, contracts between a credit protection seller and a credit
protection buyer. "The seller agrees to pay out sums by reference
to a single or group of reference entities," such as a CDO.
"The buyer buys a pre-agreed amount of credit protection on a
reference entity's obligations.... The seller sells credit
protection against the loss in value of the reference entity's
obligations if certain events occur [such as bankruptcy or
default]." But unlike buying insurance on, say, one's own
house, in a default swap, "the reference entity [the item being
insured] is not a party to the transaction and is probably unaware of
its existence," making such swaps essentially "side-bets on
the future performance of the U.S. mortgage markets and major financial
institutions." (13) CDSs in various forms quickly morphed into a
highly profitable market. By 2007, backing nearly $62 trillion (compared
to the $1.3 trillion subprime market), the CDS market had become grossly
overleveraged as credit defaults were traded by speculators for up to
100 times the value of the bonds those policies insured. (14)
By 2003, with housing prices continuing to rise, the appetite for
CDOs and CDO-referenced swap products unabated, and huge profits to be
made by those who could supply this market, two things happened:
Guidelines for mortgage-granting went on a steep slide (15) (the nadir
was likely "no income no asset" mortgages) greatly increasing
the number of subprime mortgages. Meanwhile, midsize mortgage companies
borrowed from larger banks at increasingly leveraged rates to get the
funds to buy loan pools that they, in turn, sold to Wall Street, which
sold them again, repackaged, frequently into the international markets.
Minimal regulation (16) enabled financial institutions to sell these
products widely, as high-risk loans were sliced, diced, and resold in
mixed-basket products.
Derivative markets spread risk around and protected against risks
associated with localized housing crises. (17) But unprecedented levels
of high-risk, low-transparency trading injected crisscrossing veins of
uncertainty into local and international markets. To the extent that
these veins harbored "bad risk," markets became networks of
"interlocking fragility." (18) Experienced managers,
distracted by a combination of huge potential profits, sophisticated
computer models purporting to confirm the AAA status of complicated loan
bundles, and the belief that spreading diversified products out in the
world securities market would somehow protect everyone from the
consequences of defaults, overrode their own hesitations. (19)
By 2006, these weaknesses honeycombed the financial system. Then,
falling U.S. property values set off a chain reaction. Foreclosures
rose, the instability of derivatives markets was exposed, and confidence
in the creditworthiness of even venerable financial institutions was
severely undermined. Between 2007 and 2008, the subprime mortgage market
crisis ballooned into a full-blown credit and liquidity crisis. The
tissue of trust on which markets always depend thinned dangerously.
A principle of agency and accountability insists that economic
markets are not weather-like processes, but complex sets of
relationships that are produced and affected by human agency. To work at
optimum efficiency for the common good, markets require
structurally-attuned, political buffering in the form of effective
norms, rules and oversight, and practitioners who exhibit "business
virtue" by cooperating responsibly with both the letter and spirit
of pertinent norms and regulations.
Debates about the credit crisis often betray disagreements about de
facto or de jure limits of agency in economic processes. (20)
Extrapolating the Smithian metaphor of the "invisible hand,"
some hold that financial markets cannot be controlled. Others contend
that markets ought not be interfered with. "It is easy to believe
that the processes of global economy are beyond our control.... Both
those on the political right and the left tend to encourage such a view,
the right emphasizing the invisible hand of the free market that
benefits all and the left emphasizing a handful of elites who run the
capitalist machine that exploits the masses." (21) Certain
economists admit degrees of agency and accountability but argue that
traditional ethical categories, which focus on personal ethics, must be
adapted to the impersonal and competitive features of complex market
relations. (22) And business ethicists have debated the extent to which
competitive market relations operate by a game-like code wherein
participants, expecting one another to bluff, feint and maneuver to gain
the most profitable advantage for their respective stakeholders. (23)
Hindsight suggests multiple failures of accountability and business
virtue in the buildup to the 2008 credit crisis. First, many agents
recognized the dangers of extending huge credit lines to poor-risk
homebuyers and of overleveraging credit at multiple levels, but the
pressure of demand and the enticement of high rewards for supplying that
demand overruled prudence. This bred collusion between irresponsible
borrowers (including individual home-buyers and investors) and
irresponsible lenders. Second, highly complex and varied derivative
products and contracts diminished buyers' and sellers' ability
to make well-informed decisions about price and risk. Third, the
temptation to take advantage of these markets was great, because the
short-term payoffs were high, the risk appeared low, and external
regulation or oversight was limited or absent. Fourth, even when
evidence mounted that a proliferating derivative market based on
securities whose collateral was contaminated by poorly backed loans in a
thinning housing bubble threatened the whole credit system, an ethos of
"everyone is doing it," combined with rationalizing technical
maneuvers (including off-balance sheet accounting techniques, the use of
credit rating agencies with conflicts of interest, and computer models
that predicted security for commonsensically foolish levels of risk)
deterred most from shifting course.
As Arjun Appadurai observes, this perfect financial storm required
"arcane changes in the rules of accounting which allowed banks to
disguise totally unspecified uncertainties as calculable (and
profitable) risks; it required remarkable suspension of the elementary
rules of government oversight over financial institutions; and it
required a society that did not mind living with awesome amounts of debt
at every level of its functioning." Many relevant participants did
not fully understand "what derivatives were or how they worked, and
each one hoped that they would be sitting on a secure chair ... when the
music stopped. The music stopped because of the housing market ... but
the game which stopped was a much larger faith-based system based on the
radical replacement of risk by uncertainty." (24) Marshall Auerback
identifies this infiltration of markets by genuine uncertainty, rather
than calculable risk, as a primary factor in the recent credit
implosion. (25)
A third, incarnational principle refuses to deracinate social and
economic relations from their embodied, material bases and consequences,
and demands that economic processes, however complex, remain anchored in
and accountable to the situations and needs of the embodied persons,
local communities, and particular cultures from whom they spring, on
whom they depend, and whose welfare they influence. (26) Thus official
teaching cautions concerning global financial markets' increasingly
abstract contours and self-referential workings: "A financial
economy that is an end unto itself is destined to contradict its goals,
since it is no longer in touch with its roots and has lost sight of its
constitutive purpose ... [and] essential role of serving the real
economy, and, ultimately, of contributing to the development of people
and the human community." (27) This criticism is especially
pertinent to the speculative distention of financial markets over the
past decade. (28) Honoring the incarnational principle also requires
that concrete impacts of large-scale economic dynamics on local
communities, workers, and their families be given careful attention.
(29)
A principle of subsidiarity calls for dispersing power in economic
relations, locating decision-making authority at local levels wherever
possible, and resisting power's usurpation by governments,
corporations, or any body lacking accountability to the communities it
affects. (30) While accepting ordered asymmetries of power,
subsidiarity's norm of subsiduum, (mutual assistance) requires
"higher" levels of organization such as the state to ensure
the conditions whereby power and authority can be appropriately
exercised at local and grassroots levels. (31)
Power's tendency to clot and concentrate suggests that global
financial markets require oversight mechanisms devoted to ensuring that
economic and social power circulates to the grassroots. Subsidiarity,
then, both reflects an incarnational appreciation for local sites of
economic agency (such as states, communities, and families), and points
to the need for international collaboration in formulating, and
continually updating, regulations designed to keep global markets
connected to the common good.
The extent to which such dispersion of power is fostered by the
capitalist economy in its currently dominant form is debated both within
and outside religious ranks. (32) Globalization theorists like Ulrich
Beck and Arjun Appadurai critique a hegemonic rhetoric of "faith in
the market system" and a fervor for its preservation reminiscent of
religious piety. In the post-Cold War era, they suggest, market
capitalism has sought to position itself as the "one, true,
catholic" economic faith.
Beck criticizes a neoliberal agenda that has attempted to
"generalize from the short-lived historic victories of mobile
capital." In an ideology that frames markets as "absolute and
autonomous," "what is best for capital becomes the best option
for everyone." Unless sufficiently buffered, transnational capital
trumps any less-powerful interests. In current circumstances, "the
power of this new liberalism rests on a radical inequality; not just
anyone is permitted to flaunt the rules. The breaking or changing of
rules remains the revolutionary prerogative of capital." Corporate
and financial institutions' tendency to clamor in hard times for
government intervention that in good times they would vigorously resist
reflects a proclivity for privatizing market success and socializing
market failure that illustrates Beck's claim. To effectively
counterweight transnational capital's clout and protect
subsidiarity will require nations to build multilateral regional or
global unions invested with real political power. (33)
Finally, and crucially, the combined principles of solidarity and
preferential option for the most vulnerable yoke an embrace of the
mutual obligations entailed by human interdependence within a shared
natural and social environment, with a priority commitment to including
and empowering those whom current economic arrangements oppress,
exploit, or marginalize. (34) The 2008 financial meltdown brought home
the inescapable connectedness--de facto solidarity--of a globalized
economy. One commentator compared citizens protesting the U.S.
government's $700 billion bailout of financial markets to people on
one side of a sinking ship crying, "We did our duty; our side is
fine; just let the irresponsible folk on that other side go down!"
(35) But forging policies and practices that infuse this simultaneously
global and localized ("glocal") economic web (36) with an
intentional solidarity aimed at democratizing power in pursuit of an
ecologically sustainable, economic common good is a radical goal that
supersedes anything the United Nations' "social
development" approach to globalization--a model largely embraced by
official Catholic teaching--has attempted to date. (37)
With the collapse of the speculative bubble, Appadurai observes,
"as usual, vulnerable nations, communities and persons are the most
exposed." (38) Over the past decade trade and debt disparities
between richer and poorer nations increased; within developed nations
involved in the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development
(OECD), conditions for those with less deteriorated while the benefits
of growth augmented the incomes of the affluent. (39) Absent targeted,
sustained strategies for ensuring inclusive solidarity, financial
remedies and assistance will flow toward already-privileged corporations
or regions. Some concerns will be deemed "too big--or important--to
fail," others as too small or too weak to matter. To advance
inclusive economic solidarity will require intelligent scholarship,
creative leadership and concerted, sacrificial effort by individuals and
communities. Solidarity makes special demands on Catholic scholars,
institutions, and citizens, demands we ignore or minimize to our moral
and spiritual peril.
In bringing these principles to bear on current economic
difficulties, Christian ethicists must address complex and contested
questions concerning: (a) Description and diagnosis: How are
contemporary financial markets supposed to operate, for what ends and
whose benefit? What has caused recent dysfunction? What are the
anticipated consequences of the 2008 crisis, especially for vulnerable
communities and persons? (b) Normativity: What aspects of financial
markets are subject to moral evaluation, and according to what
principles and norms? How are diagnoses and prescriptions to be made in
light of economy's purposes? (c) Accountability: For what, and how,
are various economic agents to be held accountable? How might economic
practices and structures (from local to global) be organized to foster
responsible agency at all levels? (d) Prescriptions and strategies for
change: What changes (personal, cultural, institutional) are needed to
ensure that markets better serve persons' economic well-being,
understood through the lens of solidarity and the preferential option
for the poor? How are these changes to be infused into individual,
local, and macroeconomic practices? (40)
The Catholic moral tradition regards work, business, trade, the
pursuit, investment, and distribution of wealth, and their supporting
virtues (diligence, entrepreneurial creativity, organization,
leadership, efficiency, contractual honesty, etc.) as instrumental to
economy's threefold human end: the material survival and
flourishing of all community members (in a global marketplace, that
community extends dramatically); the development and use of
participants' abilities; and the promotion of the common good--all
for the greater glory of God. (41) Public deliberations over economic
diagnoses and policies need robust Catholic ethical voices that provide
intelligent and value-sensitive analyses of the circumstances at hand
and the stakes involved--especially for the vulnerable; (42) agentially-
and structurally-astute evaluations of what works and what does not; and
theologically grounded, publicly persuasive rationales for action plans
that can direct markets toward solidary, sustainable ends. (43)
RESOURCES FOR FURTHER DEVELOPMENT
The economic-ethical agenda suggested by this discussion is urgent,
manifold, and barely begun. I close by flagging three promising loci for
further scholarly and practical work.
Bernard Lonergan and Economic Ethics
The ethical and economic writings of Bernard Lonergan harbor potent
resources for addressing the pitfalls and potentials of 21st-century
markets. (44) Stephen L. Martin's lucid 2008 volume introduces
Lonergan's economic theory and situates it in relation to Catholic
social thought and liberal and liberationist economics. (45) In
Lonergan's economics manuscripts, which complement more
foundational epistemological and ethical writings, Kenneth Melchin
detects one major idea "screaming out": "a market is not
a mechanism that directs the economy so much as it is a pipeline through
which human decisions can direct the economy." (46)
For Lonergan, when decisions within different economic sectors are
informed by accurate insights into the unfolding dialectical
relationships involved, a pattern of responsible decisions can yield a
"cycle of growth." Economic decisions oriented toward value
(that is, decisions that integrate legitimate concerns for self-interest
and efficiency into economy's normative purposes) "impart the
appropriate nudges and nuances into the economy" and hedge economic
relations against "a longer cycle of decline." Decline is
"a dynamic that builds on itself, yielding conditions that seem
more and more opaque and impenetrable to understanding, much less to
repair." Without an adequate understanding of economic agents and
dynamics, efforts to repair things may "accelerate decline
precisely at the moment when a potential for growth could be coming into
play, if decision-making were appropriately informed." One culprit
in decline is a self-perpetuating "general bias of common
sense," which, "in its refusal of adequate theory,
progressively builds into the empirical situation corresponding
deformations that accelerate as they become the experiential basis for
the next round of insights." (47) Paraphrasing Lonergan's
biases as, "neurosis, egoism, loyalism, and
anti-intellectualism," Tad Dunne adds that, in each type,
"one's intelligence is selectively suppressed and one's
self-image is supported by positive affects that reinforce the bias and
by negative affects toward threats to the bias." (48)
For describing recent market events, these Lonerganian concepts
seem strikingly apt. Over the past decade, decision-making that failed
to incorporate pursuit of value (rather than merely self-interest or of
"what works" in the short run) compounded oversights and bred
bias. As financial institutions (from CEOs to consumers) retreated from
a culture of prudence and transparently calculated risk, (49) an
egregious example of the cycle of decline unfolded. Interest overcame
intelligence and value as home-buyers and investors gambled on
overleveraged debts, proceeding on, at best, implausible assumptions
that housing prices would never stop rising, and that the rot of bad
debt could be hedged by ingenious financial instruments that would
protect everyone from major exposure. In a time- and profit-pressured
atmosphere, stupidity, denial, and self-interest fed on one another as
persons at every point on the chain failed to ask, or pursue, further
relevant questions. As scholars and practitioners work to unravel the
snarls besetting financial markets, Lonergan's thought may prove
freshly illuminating. (50)
Alternative Streams in Economic Theory
Given their historical interconnections, it is surprising that so
few contemporary Catholic economic ethicists (Daniel Finn is the notable
exception) draw seriously on the scholarship of social economics. (51)
Economists in the Association of Social Economics, along with its
journal, Review of Social Economy, comprise a wealth of resources for
Christian ethicists studying economy and finance. Recent themed issues
of Review of Social Economy address such topics as social capital, the
economic subject in modern and postmodern economics, (52) and living
standards and social wellbeing. (53) Other sites of norm-sensitive
economic scholarship are the fields of behavioral and institutional
economics (or New Institutional Economics--NIE). Some see these
approaches as moving the neoclassical mainstream of the field toward
revision, even paradigm shift. (54) Finally, a growing cohort of
feminist economists are producing works attuned to women's varied
economic contributions, concerns, and well-being. (55)
Finance Ethics and Ethics Education
Also inviting further engagement is the still-nascent field of
finance ethics and ethics education. Inroads to date include (1) the
1997 book by John Dobson, Finance Ethics: The Rationality of Virtue;
(56) (2) the publication since 2003 of an international journal, Finance
and the Common Good, (57) treating topics including corporate
responsibility and socially responsible investment, normative analyses
of financial practices, regulation, and Islamic finance; and (3) in the
United States and internationally, efforts of Catholic business schools,
collaborating with the Association of Catholic Business Schools and the
International Association of Jesuit Business Schools, to devise
strategies for incorporating ethics grounded in Catholic social teaching
into finance and other business curricula. (58) More broadly, the
dramatic events of the past year underscore economic-ethical education
and formation as pressing agendas requiring sustained participation by
academic and religious institutions, economics and business leaders, and
citizens.
(1) See, e.g., Kenneth R. Himes, O.F.M., ed., Modern Catholic
Social Teaching: Commentaries and Interpretations (Washington:
Georgetown University, 2005); Michael P. Hornsby-Smith, An Introduction
to Catholic Social Thought (New York: Cambridge University, 2006); Mary
Ann Cejka et al., The Development of Peoples: Challenges for Today and
Tomorrow: Essays to Mark the Fortieth Anniversary of Populorum
Progressio (Blackrock, Co. Dublin: Columba, 2007); Uzochukwu Jude Njoku,
"Discourse on the Foundations of Solidarity in the Social
Encyclicals of John Paul II," Ethical Perspectives 14 (2007) 79-97.
On Catholic social thought, business, and economy, see: Helen Alford,
O.P., et al., eds., Rediscovering Abundance: Interdisciplinary Essays on
Wealth, Income, and Their Distribution in the Catholic Social Tradition
(Notre Dame, Ind.: University of Notre Dame, 2006); John C. Medaille,
The Vocation of Business: Social Justice in the Market Place (New York:
Continuum, 2007), which presents a case for an "evolved" free
market capitalism based on Catholic social teaching; Philip Booth, ed.,
Catholic Social Teaching and the Market Economy (London: Institute for
Economic Affairs, 2007), which explicitly defends capitalist markets;
Wolfgang Palaver's critical review of Booth in Studies in Christian
Ethics 21 (2008) 521-24; Albino Barrera, O.P., offers economic and
theological analyses in Modern Catholic Social Documents and Political
Economy (Washington: Georgetown, 2001), Economic Compulsion and
Christian Ethics (New York: Cambridge University, 2005), and God and the
Evil of Scarcity: Moral Foundations of Economic Agency (Notre Dame,
Ind.: University of Notre Dame, 2005).
(2) On torture see William T. Cavanaugh, "Making Enemies: the
Imagination of Torture in Chile and the United States," Theology
Today 63 (2006) 307-23; Edward Feld, "Developing a Jewish Theology
Regarding Torture," ibid. 324-29; Jeremy Walton, "What Can
Christian Teaching Add to the Debate about Torture?" ibid. 330-43;
Dianna Ortiz, "Theology, International Law, and Torture: A
Survivor's View," ibid. 344-48; David P. Gushee, "Against
Torture: An Evangelical Perspective," ibid. 349-64; Jonathan
Rothchild, "Moral Consensus, the Rule of Law, and the Practice of
Torture," Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics 26 (2006)
125-56; Michael Peppard, "'The Secret Weapon: Religious Abuse
in the 'War on Terror,'" Commonweal 85.21 (December 5,
2008) 11-18. On terrorism see African Ecclesiastical Review 48.2 (June
2006).
(3) On the U.N. Millennial Development Goals see United Nations Web
site, http://www.undp.org/mdg/ (all Web sites cited in this Note were
accessed December 8, 2008). On debt, trade, and inequality see Andrew
Dilnot, "Debt: An Economist's Perspective," Studies in
Christian Ethics 14 (2001) 1-8; Karl-Heinz Pesch, "Debt Crisis and
Debt Relief," Irish Theological Quarterly 70 (2005) 355-61; Pesch,
"Debt: Some Further Comments," Irish Theological Quarterly 71
(2006) 350-51; Anne Pettifor (who connects unregulated financial markets
to poverty), "The Urgent Need for Economic Transformation:
Subordinating the Interests of Finance Capital To Human Rights,"
Studies in Christian Ethics 15 (2002) 11-19; and Martin Khor, "The
Need for Reform and Rethinking of the WTO and the Multilateral Trading
System," ibid. 20-24. For International Monetary Fund information
on debt relief progress, see http://www.imf.org/external/np/exr/facts/
hipc.htm. On poverty see Stephen C. Smith, Ending Global Poverty: A
Guide to What Works (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2005) and the review
of Smith in Heythrop Journal 48 (2007) 680, which names "the
problem of governance" as "the elephant in the
sitting-room" that Smith ignores; Kent Van Til, Less Than Two
Dollars a Day: A Christian View of Poverty and the Free Market (Grand
Rapids, Mich.: Eerdmans, 2007). On world hunger crisis see Eric Tollens
and Johan De Tavernier, "World Food Security and Agriculture in a
GIobalizing World: Challenges and Ethics," Ethical Perspectives
13.1 (March 2006) 91-115; Catholic Relief Services,
http://www.crs.org/public-policy/food-crisis-causes.cfm; other
frequently-updated sources of information are the United Nations World
Food Program, http://www.wfp.org/english/, and Bread for the World,
http://www.bread.org/. On ethical dimensions of world hunger and
religions' role see Per Pinstrup-Andersen and Peter Sandoe, eds.,
Ethics, Hunger, and Globalization: In Search of Appropriate Policies,
International Library of Environmental, Agricultural, and Food Ethics 12
(New York: Springer, 2007). On HIV/AIDS see Regina Ammicht Quinn and
Hille Haker, eds., AIDS (Concilium 2007/3); on Catholic Relief
Services' AIDS work in Africa, see Matt Hanley, "Risk
Avoidance: the Imperative and Relevance of Abstinence and Be Faithful (A
& B)," African Ecclesiastical Review 47-48, nos. 4-1 (December
2005-March 2006) 261-73; and Linda Hogan, ed., Applied Ethics in a World
Church: The Padua Conference (Maryknoll, N.Y.: Orbis, 2008) chaps.
14-18.
(4) On race and King see James W. Perkinson's prescient,
"Like a Thief in the Night: Black Theology and White Church in the
Third Millennium," Theology Today 60 (2004) 508-24; ibid. 65
(2008), esp. Coretta Scott King, "The Legacy of Martin Luther King,
Jr.: The Church in Action" 7-16; Peter J. Paris, "Martin
Luther King Jr.'s Vision of America: An Ethical Assessment"
17-25; and Traci C. West, "Gendered Legacies of Martin Luther King
Jr.'s Leadership" 41-56; see also Rufus Burrow Jr., God and
Human Dignity: The Personalism, Theology, and Ethics of Martin Luther
King, Jr. (Notre Dame, Ind.: University of Notre Dame, 2006) and review
by Glenn Stassen, Journal of Religion 88 (2008) 416-18. On white
privilege see, e.g., Laurie M. Cassidy and Alexander Mikulich, eds.,
Interrupting White Privilege: Catholic Theologians Break the Silence
(Maryknoll, N.Y.: Orbis, 2007).
(5) Theological Studies 69.2 (June 2008); also M. F. Murove,
"The Empirical Contradiction of Globalisation: A Quest for a
Relational Ethical Paradigm," Journal of Theology for Southern
Africa 121 (March 2005) 4-18; D. N. Field, "Journeys beyond the
Gate: The Reign of God and the Response-Ability of the Globalised Middle
Classes," Journal of Theology for Southern Africa 123 (November
2005) 48-61; Rebecca Todd Peters, In Search of the Good Life: The Ethics
of Globalization (New York: Continuum, 2004) and review by Michael S.
Hogue, Journal of Religion 87 (2007) 642-43; Christian Arnsperger,
"Comment peut-on etre altermondialiste? Cosmopolitism and the
Resistance to Capitalism," Ethical Perspectives 13 (2006) 647-72;
Applied Ethics" in a Worm Church chaps. 1-8; and Albino Barrera,
O.P., Globalization and Economic Ethics: Distributive Justice in the
Knowledge Economy (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2007).
(6) Kenneth R. Himes, O.F.M., "Consumerism in Christian
Ethics," Theological Studies 68 (2007) 132-53. See also Wilfred
Dolfsma, "Consuming Symbolic Goods: Identity and Commitment,"
Review of Social Economy 62 (2004) 275-76; Martha Starr,
"Consumption, Work Hours, and Values in the Writings of John A.
Ryan: Is It Possible to Return to the Road Not Taken?" Review of
Social Economy 66 (2008) 7-24; Gregory Beabout and Eduardo Echeverria,
"The Culture of Consumerism: A Catholic and Personalist
Critique," Journal of Markets and Morality 5 (2002) 339-84; Andrew
Yuengert, "Free Markets and the Culture of Consumption," in
Catholic Social Teaching and the Market Economy; and Mark Nixon,
"Satisfaction for Whom? Freedom for What? Theology and the Economic
Theory of the Consumer," Journal of Business Ethics 70 (2007)
39-60.
(7) "Sapiential" here connotes not only Aristotle's
phronesis or practical reason, but the wisdom that is a gift of the Holy
Spirit. As theological inquiry, Christian economic ethics is at bottom a
spiritual pursuit.
(8) Mary Elsbernd, O.S.F., begins with this issue of
"voice" in her Moral Note, "Social Ethics,"
Theological Studies 66 (2005) 137-58, at 137.
(9) Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace (hereafter PCJP),
Compendium of the Social Doctrine of the Church (Washington: U.S.
Conference of Catholic Bishops, 2004), chap. 7, nos. 361-75.
(10) See "Interview: Prof. Susan Wachter on Seeuritizations
and Deregulation," Knowledge@Wharton E-newsletter, June 20, 2008,
http://knowledge.wharton. upenn.edu/article.cfm?articleid=1993;
"The Giant Pool of Money," National Public Radio segment aired
on May 9, 2008, on the background and causes of the subprime mortgage
and credit crisis, This American Life, episode no. 355, http://
www.thislife.org/extras/radio/355_transeript.pdf; Matthew Attwood,
"The Emergence of Credit Derivatives," Credit Magazine, August
2004, http://www.creditmag.com/public/showPage.html?page=168229; and
Jeff Madura, Financial Markets and Institutions, abridged, 8th ed.
(Cincinnati: South Western, 2008).
(11) "The birth of credit derivatives can be traced back to
two major market developments: the packing of US mortgage bonds in the
1980s to create collateralised debt obligations and the selling of
default protection in the 1990s as credit default swaps to trade credit
risk. Over the past decade, the credit derivatives market has grown at a
breathtaking speed. When the most basic form of credit derivatives,
credit default swaps (CDS), first emerged in the US in the early 1990s,
they were used principally by banks as proprietary instruments to hedge
their loan exposure. By ... the latter part of the decade ... credit
derivatives were working their way into the mainstream of the financial
market .... Within no time, credit default swaps were being used to
build increasingly complicated derivatives of their own" (Attwood,
"Credit Derivatives").
(12) Credit rating agencies hired to calculate risk levels were
pressed for positive ratings on products their clients were anxious to
sell, making computer models that judged risk-ridden bundles as
"money good" therefore less likely to be questioned.
(13) Steve Kroft, "The Bet That Blew Up Wall Street," CBS
60 Minutes, October 26, 2008,
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2008/10/26/60minutes/main4546199.shtml
(14) Jesse Eisinger, "Death By Derivatives," Conde Nast
Portfolio, November 2008, http://www.portfolio.com/
interactive-features/2008/10/Timeline-of-Derivatives-Market; Edmund
Parker, "Derivatives Uncovered" (Mayer-Brown Publications)
October 2005, http://www.mayerbrown.com/
publications/article.asp?id=3648&nid=6; and Edmund Parker and
Jamilia Piracci, "Documenting Credit-Default Swaps on Asset-Backed
Securities" (Mayer-Brown Publications) April 2007,
http://www.mayerbrown.com/publications/article.asp?id=3517&nid=6.
"Overleverage" refers to "a balance sheet condition where
the entity is incapable of servicing its debt load (interest payments)
with available capital resources. Simply put, the entity is carrying too
much debt" (Financial Dictionary [2008]),
http://www.financial-dictionary.com; also Jeff Madura, Financial Markets
and Institutions 160-61,728.
(15) Mortgage guidelines were relaxed in the 1990s, partly due to
well-intentioned efforts to make home ownership possible for more
Americans. But by 2007, adjustable-rate mortgages (ARMs) accounted for
30% of all mortgages, and for 75% of subprime mortgages. As ARMs
continue to reset at higher rates (in 2009 60% of ARMS made since 2004
were to increase by 25% or more, and 25% by 50% or more), defaults are
rising precipitously. See Economic Policy Institute, "The ARMs
Alarm," May 2, 2007,
http://www.epi.org/content.cfm/webfeatures_snap shots_20070502; also
Kristopher Gerardi, Adam Hale Shapiro, and Paul S. Willen,
"Subprime Outcomes: Risky Mortgages, Homeownership Experiences, and
Foreclosures," Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Working Papers no.
70-15, May 2008, http://www.bos.frb.org/economic/wp/wp2007/wp0715.pdf.
(16) U.S. critics fault the December 21, 2000, Commodity Futures
Modernization Act (HR 5660, S 3283) and an antiregulatory climate during
the subsequent Bush administration.
(17) I thank economist Mary Beth Combs, Fordham University, for
clarifying this point.
(18) David Brooks ("The Behavioral Revolution," New York
Times, October 28, 2008, A31) referenced Nassim N. Taleb (see, e.g., his
The Black Swan: The Impact of the Highly Improbable [New York: Random
House, 2007]).
(19) This American Life transcript, 10-11. See Alex Blumberg,
"How Credit Default Swaps Spread Financial Rot," National
Public Radio, October 30, 2008, http://www.npr.org/templates/
story/story.php?storyId=96333239&ps=cprs.
(20) Frequently the crisis is framed as a "Frankenstein"
narrative: "Even when well-meaning, responsible people create a
product that helps them, it can have disastrous and unintended
consequences.... That's why markets need oversight" (Jesse
Eisinger, "Behind the Story: Market Mayhem," Conde Nast
Portfolio, November 2008,
http://www.portfolio.com/in-this-issue/Jesse-Eisinger-Q-and-A).
Oversight solutions themselves require ongoing scrutiny because (as
behavioral economists are now documenting and Reinhold Niebuhr famously
emphasized) the unreliability of human perception and judgment,
especially when clouded by self-interest, makes both governmental and
business bodies untrustworthy market guardians.
(21) Laura Stivers, "A Sense of Place in a Globalized World:
Place-Based Organizing for Corporate Accountability," Journal of
the Society of Christian Ethics 27 (2007) 95-111, at 97, citing Julie A.
Nelson, "Breaking the Dynamic of Control: A Feminist Approach to
Economic Ethics," Journal of Feminist Studies in Religion 19 (2003)
32-33.
(22) Economists Peter J. Hill and John Lunn ("Markets and
Morality: Things Ethicists Should Consider When Evaluating Market
Exchange," Journal of Religious Ethics 35 [2007] 627-53) agree with
Nobel-laureate Vernon Smith that "Markets economize the need for
virtue, but do not eliminate it" (637), but argue that the
impersonal exchange of mass markets calls for a different, impersonal
ethics, something theologians often misunderstand. (They understate the
extent to which concentrations of corporate power systematically skew
the exchanges from which "impersonal" price information is
derived.)
(23) Albert Z. Carr, in "Is Business Bluffing Ethical?"
Harvard Business Review 46.1 (January/February 1968) 143-53, likened
business rules to those of a poker game; "ethics" in business
has a circumscribed meaning coherent with Milton Friedman's
contention expressed in the title of his article "The Social
Responsibility of a Business Is to Increase Its Profits," New York
Times Magazine (September 13, 1970) 122-26. See Carr's essay, with
responses, in Joanne B. Ciulla, Clancy W. Martin, and Robert C. Solomon,
eds., Honest Work: A Business Ethics Reader (New York: Oxford
University, 2007) chap. 3, and in Scott B. Rae and Kenman L. Wong,
Beyond Integrity: A Judeo-Christian Approach to Business Ethics, 2nd ed.
(Grand Rapids, Mich.: Zondervan, 2004) chap. 1. See Sissela Bok, Lying:
Moral Choice in Public and Private Life (1978; New York: Vintage, 1999).
(24) Arjun Appadurai, "Welcome to the Faith-Based
Economy," Social Science Resource Council, "The Immanent
Frame: Religion and American Politics," October 14, 2008,
http://www.ssrc.org/blogs/immanent_frame/2008/10/14/welcome_to.
the-faith-based-economy/#comment-4813. See also Frank H. Knight's
classic Risk, Uncertainty, and Profit (Boston: Houghton-Mifflin, 1921)
chap. 1.
(25) "The key distinction ... is that while 'risk'
can to some extent be priced by financial market participants,
'uncertainty' cannot. The failure to distinguish between the
two concepts is one reason the seizure of the credit system has been so
rapid and has caught everybody off-guard.... Pricing opacity ... is
mirrored by a lack of statistical transparency, which breeds even
greater uncertainty." Marshall Auerback, "Risk vs.
Uncertainty: The Cause of the Current Financial Crisis," Japan
Policy Research Institute Occasional Paper no. 37 (October 2007) 5-6,
http://www.jpri.org/ publications/occasionalpapers/op37.html.
(26) Thus, e.g., "a major lesson in the reform of financial
institutions in Sub-Saharan Africa is the realisation that financial
sector liberalization that fails to take the socioeconomic setting of
the region into consideration, will not achieve its objectives"
(Peter Gakunu, "Reforming the Financial System in Sub-Saharan
Africa: The [Long] Way Ahead," Finance and the Common Good 28-29
[2007] 139-46.
(27) PCJP, Compendium no. 369.
(28) John Bogle, The Struggle for the Soul of Capitalism (New Haven
Conn.: Yale University, 2005), gives an insider's trenchant
critique of financial institutions' post-1980s shift from
investment to speculation, from being "stock owners to stock
traders." See Joe Pettit's discussion of shareholder primacy,
"The Spoil of the Poor Is in Your Houses," Journal of the
Society of Christian Ethics 27 (2007) 33-55, at 47-52.
(29) On working poor families, see especially Jody Heymann, M.D.,
Forgotten Families: Ending the Growing Crisis Confronting Children and
Working Families in the Global Economy (New York: Oxford, 2006); Global
Working Families Project, http://www.hsph.harvard.edu/
globalworkingfamilies/; The State of Working America 2007-2008
(Washington: The Economic Policy Institute, 2008), and Web site
http://www.stateofworkingamerica.org/ index.html; Gloria Albrecht,
Hitting Home: Feminist Ethics, Women's Work, and the Betrayal of
"Family Values" (New York: Continuum, 2002); and Review of
Social Economy 66.1 (January 2008), a themed issue on "Living
Standards."
(30) Charles Lindblom, The Market System: What It Is, How It Works,
and What to Make of It (New Haven, Conn.: Yale University, 2001),
addresses the tension between markets envisioned as a matrix of roughly
egalitarian competition and the enormous command and political power of
corporations.
(31) See "The Principle of Subsidiarity," PCJP,
Compendium nos. 185-89. See Kenneth R. Himes, O.F.M., "Catholic
Social Teaching and Globalization," Theological Studies 69 (2008)
282-87.
(32) For ethical defenses of market capitalism, see, e.g., the
Acton Institute's journal, Markets and Morality; Samuel Gregg, The
Commercial Society: Foundations and Challenges in a Global Age (Lanham,
Md.: Lexington, 2007); Michael Novak, Three in One: Essays on Democratic
Capitalism 1976-2000 (Lanham, Md.: Rowman & Littlefield, 2001). On
capitalism's deleterious effects see Michael L. Budde and Robert W.
Brimlow, Christianity Incorporated: How Big Business Is Buying the
Church (Grand Rapids, Mich.: Brazos, 2002); Vincent Miller, Consuming
Religion (New York: Continuum, 2003); David K. Ma, "Destructive
Creation: The Covenantal Crisis of Capitalist Society," Theology
Today 63 (2006) 150-64. On alternative Christian approaches to economy,
see Budde and Brimlow, Christianity Incorporated; D. Stephen Long et.
al, Calculating Futures: Theology, Ethics, and Economics (Waco, Tex.:
Baylor University, 2007); Kathryn Tanner, Economy of Grace (Minneapolis:
Augsburg Fortress, 2005); and Philip Goodchild, Theology of Money
(London: SCM, 2007). See also economist Rowena Pecchenino's
critiques of Tanner and Goodchild in Irish Theological Quarterly 72
(2007) 96-104, and 73 (2008) 211-12.
(33) Ulrich Beck, "A New Cosmopolitanism Is in the Air: Seven
Theses to Combat the Global Power of Capitalism," Sign and
Sight.Com (November 20, 2007) 1-6, at 3, www.signandsight.com. Beck sees
the European Union as a prototype for the necessary alliances. See
Ulrich Beck, What Is Globalization? trans. Patrick Camiller (Cambridge,
UK: Polity, 2005); Arjun Appadurai, "Faith-Based Economy";
Andrew Cornford, Finance and the Common Good 28-29 (2007) 171-74, notes
the current hegemony of a particular "American" model of
neoliberal market capitalism. See PCJP, Compendium nos. 370-72: In an
era of global economy, "the loss of centrality on the part of
States must coincide with a greater commitment on the part of the
international community to exercise a strong guiding role." The
Compendium's ensuing remarks overlap with Beck's.
(34) On solidarity see Pope John Paul II, Sollicitudo rei socialis
(1987); PCJP, Compendium 85-87; Constance J. Nielsen, "The Harmony
between the Right to Private Property and the Call to Solidarity in the
Modern Catholic Social Teaching" (PhD diss., Marquette University,
2007); and Christine Firer Hinze, "Straining toward Solidarity in a
Suffering World: Gaudium et spes 'Forty Years After,'" in
Vatican I1: Fortsy Years Later, ed. William Madges (Maryknoll, N.Y.:
Orbis 2006) 165-98.
(35) For intertwined global and local effects, see, e.g.,
"From Midwest to M.T.A.: Pain from a Global Gamble," New York
Times, November 2, 2008,
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/l1/02/business/02global.html; Carter
Dougherty, "A Scramble to Shore Up Economies Worldwide," New
York Times, October 27, 2008, http://www.nytimes.com/2008/10/28/
business/worldbusiness/28banks.html Also valuable is the New York
Times's ongoing column "The Credit Crisis: The
Essentials," http://topics. nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/
subjects/c/credit_crisis/index.html
(36) On "glocality," see Beck, Globalization 46-52.
(37) Peters, In Search of the Good Life, critiques the "social
development model" of globalization, arguing that solidarity
requires attention to ecological sustainability and a genuine
democratization of power that will demand costly changes of
international bodies, nations, religious communities, and citizens. On
solidarity's requirements, see Mary E. Hobgood, "Solidarity
and the Accountability of Feminists and Church Activists to Typical
(World-Majority) Women," with responses by Daisy L. Machado, Jane
D. Schaberg, Mary C. Churchill, Christine E. Gudorf, Journal of Feminist
Studies in Religion 20 (2004) 137-68.
(38) Appadurai, "Faith-Based Economy."
(39) Growing Unequal? Income Distribution and Poverty in OECD
Countries (Paris: OECD, 2008) reports that between 1998 and 2008, income
inequality and poverty increased in most OECD countries. In
three-quarters of OECD countries (including the United States and
Mexico), growth was accompanied by increasing disparities between rich
and poor, and in Germany and the United States, incomes of the poor had
no net improvement.
(40) I advocate an economic ethics that fuses the radical critique
and transformative vision of contemporary liberationist approaches with
the strategic pursuit of education for economic virtue and incremental
policy change. See Christine Firer Hinze, "What Is Enough?" in
Having: Property, and Possession in Religious and Social Life, ed.
William Schweiker and Charles Mathewes (Grand Rapids, Mich.: Eerdmans,
2004) 162-88, esp. 171-75.
(41) Hence the U.S. bishops' pastoral, Economic Justice for
All (Washington: USCC, 1986) chap. 1, no. 1: "Every perspective on
economic life that is human, moral, and Christian must be shaped by
three questions: What does the economy do for people? What does it do to
people? And how do people participate in it?" Adam Smith embraced a
normative understanding of economy as do certain heterodox economists
today. See, e.g., Schlomo Maital, "Reclaiming Moral Sentiments:
Behavioral Economics and the Ethical Foundations of Capitalism," in
Handbook of Contemporary Behavioral Economics, ed. Morris Altman
(Armonk, N.Y.: M. E. Sharpe, 2006) 202-17. On Smithian economics as
value-laden, see, e.g., Daniel Finn, The Moral Ecology of Markets:
Assessing Claims about Markets and Justice (New York: Cambridge
University, 2006); Jonathan Rothchild, "Ethics, Law, and Economics:
Legal Regulation of Corporate Responsibility," Journal of the
Society of Christian Ethics 25 (2005) 12346; Megan Maloney, "Acting
(Economic) Persons: Adam Smith and Karol Wojtyla/John Paul II as Sources
for Economic Personalism" (Ph.D. diss., Marquette University,
2004).
(42) See, e.g., Ettore Gotti Tedeschi, "Development and
Financial Crisis: The Bubble That Will Save Us," L'Osservatore
Romano Dec. 4, 2008, 1, trans. Matthew Sherry, reproduced in Sandro
Magister, "The Encyclical on Social Doctrine Can Wait. But the
Wager on Poor Countries Can't,"
http://chiesa.espresso.repubblica.it/ articolo/210100?eng=y.
(43) "Genuine solidarity requires sustainability"
(William French, "Greening Gaudium et spes," in Vatican II:
Forty Years Later 196-205, at 202). Economic justice entails ecological
stewardship, a point most Catholic social ethicists are only beginning
to absorb. See PCJP, Compendium chap. 10, esp. nos. 482-83, which links
closely the environmental crisis and poverty, and "the development
of the poorest countries ... and a sustainable use of the
environment."
(44) Bernard J. F. Lonergan, Insight." A Study of Human
Understanding, 5th ed., rev. and aug., Collected Works of Bernard
Lonergan (hereafter CWBL) 3, ed. Frederick E. Crowe and Robert M. Doran
(1957; Toronto: University of Toronto, 1992); Lonergan, For A New
Political Economy, CWBL 21, ed. Frederick E. Crowe (Toronto: University
of Toronto, 1998); and Lonergan, Macroeconomic Dynamics: An Essay in
Circulation Analysis, CWBL 15, ed. Frederick G. Lawrence (Toronto:
University of Toronto, 1999).
(45) Stephen L. Martin, Healing and Creativity in Economic Ethics:
The Contribution of Bernard Lonergan's Economic Thought to Catholic
Social Teaching (Lanham, Md.: University Press of America, 2008).
(46) Kenneth Melchin, interview, Lonergan Web site, n.d. (ca.
1997), http://lonergan.concordia.ca/ interviews/melchin.htm#N_5; see
also Melchin, Living with Other People (Ottawa: Novalis, 1998).
(47) Ibid.
(48) Tad Dunne, "Bernard Lonergan (1904-1984)," Internet
Dictionary of Philosophy, http://www.iep.utm.edu/1/lonergan.htm#H3.
(49) Jesse Eisinger found that credit derivatives were useful and
reasonably secure when employed within the culture of prudence that had
been the hallmark of long-established financial pillars like J. P.
Morgan: "The $58 Trillion Elephant in the Room," Conde Nast
Portfolio, November 2008, http://www.portfolio.com/views/
columns/wall-street/2008/10/15/Credit-Derivatives-Role-in-Crash.
(50) Recent works engaging Lonergan's thought for the African
context are Cyril Orji, Ethics and Religious Conflict in Africa: An
Analysis of Bias, Decline, and Conversion Based on the Works of Bernard
Lonergan (Milwaukee: Marquette University, 2008); Charles Onyango Oduke,
"Lonergan's Notion of Cosmopolis: A Study of a Higher
Viewpoint and a Creative Framework for Engaging Individual and Social
'Biases' with Special Relevance to Socio-political Challenges
of Kenya and the Continent of Africa" (Ph.D. diss., Boston College,
2005).
(51) For an overview of social economics, see, e.g., John B. Davis
and John Boyle, eds., The Social Economics of Human Material Need
(Carbondale: Southern Illinois University, 1994); Catholic social
economists include Edward J. O'Boyle and Peter Danner.
(52) David F. Ruccio and Jack Amariglio (Postmodern Moments in
Modern Economics [Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University, 2003]) respond
to critics in, "Beyond the Highs and Lows: Economics as a
'Process without a Subject,'" Review of Social Economy 65
(2007) 223-34. See also John B. Davis, "Postmodernism and the
Individual as a Process," ibid. 203-8; and John B. Davis, The
Theory of the Individual in Economics (London: Routledge, 2003). Mark C.
Taylor interprets the "spectral" features of global finance
from a postmodern, postreligious perspective in Confidence Games: Money
and Markets in a World without Redemption (Chicago: University of
Chicago, 2004); see the review of Taylor by Craig Gay in Journal of
Markets and Morality 8 (2005) 137-38.
(53) Review of Social Economy 66.1 (2008).
(54) See, e.g., Eirik G. Furubotn and Rudolf Richter, Institutions
and Economic Theory: The Contribution of the New Institutional
Economics, 2nd ed. (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan, 2005); and
Altman, Handbook of Contemporary Behavioral Economics.
(55) See, e.g., works by Nancy Folbre, Julie Nelson, and the
journal, Feminist Economics, 14 vols. (London: Routledge, 1995-).
(56) See John Dobson, Finance Ethics: The Rationality of Virtue
(Lanham, Md.: Rowman & Littlefield, 1997); and the review by Helen
Alford, in Oikonomia: Journal of Ethics and Social Sciences 1.0 (January
1999), http://www.oikonomia.it/pages/genn/ recensione.htm; John Dobson,
"Finance Education in US Business Schools: Toward a Moral
Ideology," Finance and the Common Good/Bien Commun 30-39; Thomas
Oberlechner, The Psychology of Ethics in the Finance and Investment
Industry (Research Foundation of CFA Institute, June 2007),
http://www.cfapubs.org/doi/pdf/ 10.2470/rf.v2007.n2.4697; John R.
Boatright, "Teaching Finance Ethics," Teaching Business Ethics
2 (1998) 1-15; Boatright, "Financial Ethics: An Overview," in
Beyond Integrity 300-316; Robert F. Bruner, "Ethics in
Finance," (Charlottesville, Va.: Darden Business Publishing, Case
No. UVA-F-1503, 2006).
(57) Finance and the Common Good/Bien Commun, published in Basel in
French and English, treats such topics as corporate responsibility and
socially responsible investment: Pier Luigi Sacco and Michele Viviani,
"Corporate Social Responsibility: A Critical Methodological
Appraisal," Finance and the Common Good 23 (2005-2006) 75-89; Dirk
Van Braeckel and Marc Bontemps, "SRI; The 'Materiality
Approach' vs. the 'Sustainability Approach,'" ibid.
13-14; normative analysis of financial practices: Prabu Guptara,
"Regulation vs. Transformation of Our Financial System," ibid.
21 (2005) 26-32; John Taylor and Maryellen Lewis, "Irresponsible
Lending: Lax Rules and Failed Oversight in the U.S.," ibid. 28-29
(2007) 26-29; and Islamic finance: Athar Murtuza, "Does Modern
Islamic Finance Deserve the Name?" ibid. 81-87. See also Muhammad
Ayub, Understanding Islamic Finance (Hoboken, N.J.: Wiley, 2007).
(58) The University of Saint Thomas's John A. Ryan Institute
for Catholic Social Thought sponsors national and international
conferences on economic and business ethics. See, e.g., Quentin DuPont,
S.J., "The Catholic Mission in Finance Curricula: Towards Ethically
Grounded Finance" and other papers from the conference,
"Business Education at Catholic Universities: The Role of
Mission-Driven Business Schools," June 2008,
http://www.stthomas.edu/CathStudies/cst/conferences/
becu/conferencepapers.html; also Linda Achey Kidwell and Roland E.
Kidwell, "Ethical Beliefs in the Catholic Business School: The
Impact of Catholic Social Teaching on Classroom Reality," Journal
of Markets and Morality 9 (2006) 293-316.
CHRISTINE FIRER HINZE, with her Ph.D. from the University of
Chicago, is professor in the Department of Theology, Fordham University,
New York. Specializing in Christian social ethics, Catholic social
thought, economic ethics, work and family ethics, feminist and
liberationist ethics, her recent publications include: "A
Distinctively Catholic Patriotism?" in God and Country? Christian
Perspectives on Patriotism, ed. Michael G. Long and Tracy Wenger Sadd
(2008). In press are: "Reconsidering Little Rock: Hannah Arendt,
Martin Luther King, and Catholic Social Thought on the Role of Children
and Families in the Struggle for Justice," Journal of the Society
of Christian Ethics (2009); and "Women, Work, and the Legacy of
Laborem Exercens: An Unfinished Agenda," Journal of Catholic Social
Thought (2009). In progress is a monograph entitled "Radical
Sufficiency: The Legacy and Future of the Catholic Living Wage
Agenda."