Pope On Economy: World Needs New Financial Order

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NICOLE WINFIELD | 07/ 7/09 04:38 PM | AP

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VATICAN CITY — Pope Benedict XVI called Tuesday for a new world financial order guided by ethics and the search for the common good, denouncing the profit-at-all-cost mentality blamed for bringing about the global financial meltdown.

In the third encyclical of his pontificate, Benedict pressed for reform of the United Nations and international economic and financial institutions to give poorer countries more of a say in international policy.

"There is urgent need (for) a true world political authority" that can manage the global economy, guarantee the environment is protected, ensure world peace and bring about food security for the poor, he wrote.

The document "Charity in Truth," was in the works for two years, and its publication was repeatedly delayed to incorporate the fallout from the crisis. It was released a day before leaders of the Group of Eight industrialized nations meet to coordinate efforts to deal with the global meltdown, signaling a clear Vatican bid to prod leaders for a financially responsible future and what it considers a more socially just society.

"The economy needs ethics in order to function correctly _ not any ethics, but an ethics which is people centered," Benedict wrote.

The German-born Benedict, 82, has spoken out frequently about the impact of the crisis on the poor, particularly in Africa, which he visited earlier this year. But the 144-page encyclical, one of the most authoritative documents a pope can issue, marked a new level of church teaching by linking the Vatican's long-standing social doctrine on caring for the poor with current events.

While acknowledging that the globalized economy has "lifted billions of people out of misery," Benedict accused the unbridled growth of recent years of causing unprecedented problems as well, citing mass migration flows, environmental degradation and a complete loss of trust in the world market.

He urged wealthier countries to increase development aid to poor countries to help eliminate world hunger, saying peace and security depended on it. He specified that aid should go to agricultural development to improve infrastructure, irrigation systems, transport and sharing of agricultural technology.

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At the same time, he demanded that industrialized nations reduce their energy consumption, both to better care for the environment and to let the poorer have access to energy resources.

"One of the greatest challenges facing the economy is to achieve the most efficient use _ not abuse _ of natural resources, based on a realization that the notion of 'efficiency' is not value-free," he wrote.

Benedict said that the drive to outsource work to the cheapest bidder had endangered the rights of workers, and he demanded that workers be allowed to organize in unions to protect their rights and guarantee steady, decent employment.

Benedict called for a whole new financial order _ "a profoundly new way of understanding business enterprise" _ that respects the dignity of workers and looks out for the common good by prioritizing ethics and social responsibility over dividend returns.

The Rev. Drew Christiansen, editor of the Jesuit monthly America and a leading social ethicist, said he was most intrigued by the pope's call for a new sector of society to work alongside government, market and civil society: for-profit entities that work for the common good, which Christiansen suggested could include "fair trade" product makers and micro-finance institutions.

"I am not sure these enterprises yet constitute a sector of economic life," Christiansen wrote on his blog. "But they are harbingers of a different, conscientious kind of economics that would not repeat the mistakes of the last 30 years."

Kirk Hanson, a business ethics professor at Santa Clara University, said that while the encyclical went into some detail about the rights of workers and the duties of the state in protecting those rights, there was precious little about how an actual CEO leader should go about business.

"It's almost as if the church has so little trust in business leaders that it speaks to the political leaders urging regulation and the consumers urging voting with their buying power," said Hanson, who chaired hearings leading up to a similar U.S. Catholic bishops' statement on capitalism and social justice in the 1980s.

Benedict has written two previous encyclicals in his four years as pope: "God is Love" in 2006 and "Saved by Hope" in 2007.

The pope's focus on world finance raised questions about the state of the Vatican's own books.

The Vatican was implicated in the 1980s collapse of Banco Ambrosiano, in which the Vatican's bank was the major shareholder, and it agreed to pay $250 million to Ambrosiano's creditors, while denying any wrongdoing.

At the start of the meltdown in October, a top Vatican bank official assured that its deposits were safe and had no liquidity problems, saying the bank had stayed away from derivatives, the financial instruments blamed in part for the crisis.

Other officials have said 80 percent of the Vatican's investments are in low-yield government bonds and 20 percent in stocks and that the Vatican does not invest in companies that produce arms or contraceptives.

The Vatican in its annual financial statement issued Saturday said it ran a deficit in 2008 for the second straight year, posting a euro900,000 ($1.28 million) loss, compared with a loss of euro9.06 million a year earlier.

VATICAN CITY — Pope Benedict XVI called Tuesday for a new world financial order guided by ethics and the search for the common good, denouncing the profit-at-all-cost mentality blamed for bringi...
VATICAN CITY — Pope Benedict XVI called Tuesday for a new world financial order guided by ethics and the search for the common good, denouncing the profit-at-all-cost mentality blamed for bringi...
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I hope I'm wrong, but I suspect that many people will pay far less attention to this official teaching on economic justice than to the controversy over what people should (or shouldn't) do with their sexual organs. Sex sells, both in commercial advertising and in politics, and the needs of the poor and of our planet are easily ignored by those preoccupied with their own (or their neighbors') eroticism.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:14 AM on 07/09/2009
- jsgaetano I'm a Fan of jsgaetano 236 fans permalink
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Doesn't Der Popenfuhrer have some kids of fondle?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:35 PM on 07/08/2009

the whole economy is a scam bult on a house of debt waiting to topple.

any so called 'recovery' is artifical

good articles: http://www.alexandria.lib.va.us/link/redir.pxe?www.iamned.com

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:01 PM on 07/08/2009
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This may be far more prescient that it appears.

The race to the bottom via free trade may soon be halted by Levelist policies.

Levelism monetizes the advantage that countries gain through lower wages and lower environmental standards and applies that amount as a tariff thus leveling the economic playing field.

Profit oriented socially motivated companies are the way to implement self-sustaining social improvements.
.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:59 AM on 07/08/2009
- CR46 I'm a Fan of CR46 279 fans permalink
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Does that mean the Pope and the catholic church are going to quit swindling poor farmers out of their land in South America???

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:22 AM on 07/08/2009
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Untruthful comments about the Catholic Church in LatAm. LatAm is going Left. We may lose Mexico to the Left in the 2012 Presidential election. If Capitalism doesn't evolve it will fail. The Pope made some very good points. We should all remember that John Paul warned us about avoiding going into Iraq. We ignored him.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:52 AM on 07/08/2009
- CR46 I'm a Fan of CR46 279 fans permalink
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Not untruthful at all. Do your research and if the pope wants to attack countries then I suggest his Swiss Guard get camo uniforms.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:57 AM on 07/08/2009
- Tom95134 I'm a Fan of Tom95134 57 fans permalink
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What makes you think that capitalism is the best approach for the people. Just as democracy isn't always the best for of government for a nation capitalism does nothing more than move money into the hands of the very rich and keep the poor in their place. In fact, unbridled capitalism (as practiced in the United States since Reagan) isn't much different than slavery except you give a false impression to those at the bottom of society that they have a way up and out. Usually, the end result of unbridled capitalism is facisim and then revolution.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:43 PM on 07/08/2009
- blimie I'm a Fan of blimie 16 fans permalink

How cute. The pope is new world order kind of guy.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:53 PM on 07/07/2009
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LOL!!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:11 AM on 07/08/2009
- jsgaetano I'm a Fan of jsgaetano 236 fans permalink
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More like a fifth column kind of guy.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:57 PM on 07/08/2009

You be da man, Benedict!

---quote---

Benedict said that the drive to outsource work to the cheapest bidder had endangered the rights of workers, and he demanded that workers be allowed to organize in unions to protect their rights and guarantee steady, decent employment.

Benedict called for a whole new financial order _ "a profoundly new way of understanding business enterprise" _ that respects the dignity of workers and looks out for the common good by prioritizing ethics and social responsibility over dividend returns.

---end quote---

Wow. Really, wow.

Point being: all those who choose to not listen to this or to not comment on it or to make it sound 'socialist' are automatically making a big, major mistake.

Because this is the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth. And it doesn't contradict free market economy in any way. All it does is ask for the implementation of what's allegedly the case already.

And if it was necessary for the Vatican to make losses before this could be pronounced, then so be it. In other words: Amen.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:03 PM on 07/07/2009
- outnow I'm a Fan of outnow 198 fans permalink

Christ did not try to sell free trade. In fact, he would go right to Wall Street and over turn the money changers' tables. These tables are right next door to our Halls of Government - the modern equivalent of the Temple.

The Protestant Ethic, as described by Max Weber, turned the words of the New Testament to support mercantilism and later market capitalism, etc. Even the institution of slavery found support in the Bible, i.e., treat your slaves well, etc.

Being greedy and dishonest is somehow packaged as being obedient to the invisible hand of the free market. The entire idea is totally absurd to reconcile the teachings of Christ with the horrors of modern capitalism. He taught the exact opposite, according to Martin Luther King, Jr. It's all double-speak, as we see these days.

I am with the Pope of this - don't use Christianity to justify policies based on greed and usury - it is dishonest at best and the way to undermine the entire agenda based on using religion to get greedy corporations richer over the backs of workers.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:31 PM on 07/07/2009

Thoughtful speech. But will it change anything? No.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:26 PM on 07/07/2009
- mamacat I'm a Fan of mamacat 164 fans permalink

He has said and done so many questionable things, that one mostly good speech will not outweigh all of the bad things he has done.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:44 AM on 07/08/2009

Read Rerum Novarum. The church have historically supported capitalism thinking that all should work together to humanize one another and it will all go swimmingly. Of course, that's not how capitalism works. I wonder how the church now views that document in this new encyclical.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:13 PM on 07/07/2009
- jtj I'm a Fan of jtj 4 fans permalink
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for the document rerum novarum to be understood, it must be read in recongition of the surrounding historical situaiton and the people of the times to whom that Pope was writing.The prinicples and premises of each of the social justice encylcals maintain respecting the fundamental dignity of each and every human person. The application of this principle meets different challenges in each generation. Those challenges that faced the workd in the time of rerum navoarum are diferent then those today. read Rerum Novarum. Incredibly insightful.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:21 PM on 07/07/2009
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Hispanic American demographic tsuanami will give the Catholic Church unprecedented power in the US over the next decades. We need capitalism that works.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:40 PM on 07/07/2009
- Choicelady I'm a Fan of Choicelady 74 fans permalink

Evangelicals support a view of religion that is centered on personal redemption which leads almost inevitably to hyper individualism in the marketplace. Wealth is perceived as "God's blessings" so of course, the market, regardless of its corruption, is nearly equal to Heaven as a source of evidence of being God's chosen. For over 1000 years, Christianity did not believe heaven was the goal - the teachings of Christ were to be followed to make earth a better place. When the corruption of faith occurred, it was manifestly a way to create a hierarchy of the "worthy" and create a repressive top=down power structure. It was highly uneven with the majority of society continuing to pursue a 'moral economy' with equity for the vast majority. It was not until Calvinism gave impetus in the early 19th C. to totally self-centered economic acquisition as manifestation of being God's elect that both the market and faith converged in the real corruption of both. Individualism is NOT the only way to live a healthy, productive life, but we've lost our own, best past and models for the future. We can reclaim these values and practices if only we have the knowledge and will.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:20 PM on 07/07/2009
- outnow I'm a Fan of outnow 198 fans permalink

You are saved if you "believe." You can be a mean rotten SOB but God needs the flattery of mass "belief" because he is so insecure?

With all due respect, a God that created the Universe would not be so insecure as to require that human beings accept propositions without proof, i.e., belief.

The Evangelicals do terrific harm to the world by deluding themselves. To be a good person you have to do good things, not just "believe." Faith-based delusions are many but making policy based on distortions do nobody any good except for as preacher who needs some tax money and a flock to fleece.

If Christ came today, he would immediately be crucified. He would be tortured first, then executed as a radical. This is the message he brought to mankind and things are just as bad today for the majority of people everywhere.

If Christ preached his message, he would be a radical and immediately crucified. He would be on a no-fly list and would be considered dangerous to the established money industry.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:40 PM on 07/07/2009

We are borrowing the stimulus money. More stimulus is equivlent to throwing gasoline on the fire. We can't possible pay the debt back... legitemately. The government will use inflation to cheapen the debt. Unfortuneatly, this will hurt the poor, the working class, and the elderly on fixed income. Reckless government spending is not a Liberal value. http://www.alexandria.lib.va.us/link/redir.pxe?www.iamned.com

Stimulus is a joke of a concept; it doesn't end up with real economic growth in the long term. Even the New Deal failed to increase private investment. It wasn't until 1941 that domestic private investment reached 1929 levels. The fact that the first stimulus has failed to stop the bleeding yet isn't surprising. Our government deficit for the year which is over 20% of GDP (when the omnibus bill, first stimulus, bailouts, and on-budget deficit are summed) is unsustainable and something's gotta give, whether it be the lenders or the interest rates.

hat tip to http://www.alexandria.lib.va.us/link/redir.pxe?www.iamned.com

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:09 PM on 07/07/2009
- iridium53 I'm a Fan of iridium53 60 fans permalink

This Papal Statement will put a real crimp in the moral standing of Republican Congressional members who are Catholic.

Their "greed is good" stance is not consistent with Papal guidance.

It's going to be tough for the whole Republican stance when the most visible spiritual leader in the world makes clear that the Republican platform is immoral.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:08 PM on 07/07/2009
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