Keep up-to-date with the work of the GI with our e-mail bulletin every few weeks.
About Globalization
Adam Smith Institute
Atlantic Blog
Brian Micklethwait
Business & Economics
Cafe Hayek
Capital Spectator
Catallaxy
Center for Global Development
Chippla's weblog
Civitas Blog
Club for Growth
ConservativeHome
Daniel W. Drezner
David Smith
De Gustibus
EconLog
Franck's blog
Freedom Institute (Ireland)
From the Heartland
Gavin Sheridan
Global Growth Blog
Hillary Johnson
Hit and Run
Iain Dale
IndiaUncut
Institutional Economics
Knowledge Problem
Kurt Johnson
Market Center Blog
Mises Institute
Mutualist Blog
Natalie Solent
ODI
Owen Barder
Pharmopoly
Positive Externality
Private Sector Development
Radley Balko
Right to Create
Rip Mix Burn
Samizdata.net
Sobering thoughts
Social Affairs Unit
Spontaneous Order
TechDirt
The American Mind
The Commons Blog
The Liberal Order
The Welfare State We're In
Tim Worstall
Tom G. Palmer
Trade Diversion
Unrestricted Domain
Vaccines for Development
| Man of the cloth attacks 'Christian economics' |
|
|
|
| Wednesday, 16 February 2005 | |
|
Mark Hart, a Rector in the Church of England, comes clean in today's Times of London. He says: "I confess. I believe in free trade." Good on him. It is deeply worrying that Britain's churches have been captured by economic illiteracy. Sunday service after Sunday service promotes economic ideas that do not work, like the need for poor countries to keep their tariffs, or for "fair trade". These ideas commonly get called "Christian economics", as though any other view is anti-Christian. Dissent is not exactly easy in a church setting, and so supporters of free trade never voice an alternative perspective. Hart says: To imagine that the Church has a special revelation that enables it to cut through these complex issues is like expecting the Met Office to forecast the date of the Second Coming. The Church should not so casually claim Christ's authority to adopt a corporate position which may be proved wrong, while excluding faithful dissenters. (Hat tip to The Commons Blog.) |