Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Chilean Model of Integral Development Visits the Vatican
Chilean Model of Integral Development Visits the Vatican
Apr 24, 2026 3:22 AM

The President of Chile, Sebastián Piñera, visited Pope Benedict XVI in the Vatican yesterday, and the Vatican’s daily newspaper L’Osservatore Romano carried a front-page article by Piñera on “Economic Development and Integral Development,” a theme of great interest to us at Acton and the subject of our current conference series Poverty, Entrepreneurship and Integral Development.

Chile is justly famous for its acceptance of free-market economics through the influence of the “Chicago Boys” who studied under Milton Friedman and others at the University of Chicago. Chileans can and should be grateful that their dictator, Agosto Pinochet, decided to leave the economy alone, unlike the other meddling dictators in Latin America who submitted their peoples to decades of economic planning and resulting misery. (Watch this clip from the fascinating PBS documentary The Commanding Heights on the Chicago Boys and Pinochet.)

Piñera’s article is noteworthy because 1) he takes economics seriously as a moral and human endeavor and doesn’t simply assume that it is vulgar albeit necessary aspect of life, and 2) he realizes that as important as economics is, it is just one aspect of life. He also backs up his economic arguments with facts and gives concrete examples of what his government plans to achieve.

If I were to quibble with anything, it would be his support of the United Nations Millennium Development Goals (MDG). No one will deny that the MDG are laubable goals, but as someone who worked for the Holy See Mission to the UN when these were being drafted, I find it a stretch to support them from a Catholic free-market perspective. The MDG rely far too much on mechanisms of the state to re-distribute wealth and do far too little to encourage entrepreunership through the core functions of the state – fighting crime, protecting private property, etc. Acton followers will recognize these arguments in our Poverty Cure initiative.

All in all, the President of Chile should be forgiven this misstep. His article nicely encapsulates what many of us know to be the surest way to promote material and spiritual advancment – through the promotion of a limited government, free entreprise, and a civil society based on sound religious and moral principles.

It doesn’t sound like rocket science, I know, but it’s always surprising how many religious leaders and development “experts” miss the boat on this.

Here’s my translation of Piñera’s piece from the Italian:

Economic Development and Integral Development

by Sebastián Piñera, President of the Republic of Chile

L’Osservatore Romano Italian daily edition, 3 March 2011

Development has always been a central objective of humanity and constitutes a top priority for nations, governments and the munity. Countries are usually classified as developed or developing, but in recent years a third category has arisen: emerging nations.

True development, however, is much more than the simple production of goods or the attainment of a certain economic output. In Caritas in veritate, Benedict XVI has deepened and emphasized the concept and necessity of an integral development, as proposed by Catholic social doctrine. Such development must favor the realization of the human person in his material and spiritual dimensions. So conceived – embracing the whole dimension of man – development is called to promote the quality of life, mon good, and defend the life and inalienable rights of the human person at all times and in all places and circumstances, with a view to a transcendent humanism.

This richer and plete understanding is reflected in the quality of life and human development measures of the United Nations, which include evaluations plement simple economic development such as life expectancy at birth, literacy of the population, access to quality primary and secondary education, social inequality and equity, democratic governance and care for the environment. Progress in each of these areas, however, presupposes and requires sustained economic growth.

In my country, Chile, average per capita annual e is currently $15,000, placing us in the category of emerging nations.

When I became President of the Republic about one year ago, we launched a program to govern with concrete objectives that were daring and noble: to end extreme poverty in our legislative term and lay the foundations so that, within the decade, Chile would succeed in ing poverty and would have the per capita e of a developed country. This is not just any kind of development, however. We aspire to an integral development that creates the opportunity of unprecedented material and spiritual progress for all. This was the dream our fathers and our grandfathers always cherished even if it was never realized. But today it appears more achievable than ever. This is exactly why it is a not only social and economic imperative but also, more importantly, a moral and ethical one, as John Paul II reminded us in his 1987 visit.

We are working tirelessly to reach these objectives. Our goals are: to obtain an annual rate of growth of 6 percent: to create 200,000 new jobs per year: to reduce delinquency and drug trafficking so that families can exercise their right to peace and security: to improve substantially the quality of education and health; to strengthen the family, to expand fundamental liberties: to deepen and increase participation in, and the transparency and vitality of, our democracy; and to protect human rights, above all the right to life from the moment of conception to natural death. For each of these aspects we can already show very concrete and significant progress.

Last year, notwithstanding the devastating effects of the earthquake and tsunami that struck our country – the fifth phenomenon of this type of violence in our history costing us $30 billion in damage, that is, 18 percent of our national e – Chile grew 5.2 percent and the projections for this year exceed 6 percent. Four-hundred thousand jobs were created, which represent almost 6 percent of our workforce. Measures of fear and crime are at their lowest in decades and drug arrests have increased substantially. We have applied deep structural reforms to the educational system, we have decisively improved the access to and quality of health care and we have launched a series of pro-family reforms, such as promoting the entry of women into the workplace without weakening their role as mothers and wives and increasing pre-school education.

In these ways, with everyone’s help, we are progressing towards development that is not only economic but also profoundly prehensive and in line with the material and spiritual reality of the person. It is mitment that goes beyond a government and even the state because it concerns each and every citizen. As the Pope has observed, it is a true vocation of the individual and the country to summon the will and effort of each and everyone to progress, realize and advance in the search for a fuller and happier life. In this, the Church and civil society play an active role.

The virtues of a united and shared national cause were fully appreciated in the rescue mission of the 33 miners who were trapped 700 meters deep inside a mountain of the Atacama Desert. For nearly three months, Chile was united like a big family, ing differences and making all the necessary efforts to find and save these miners. In this tight spot, as with last year’s earthquake, we could appreciate the toughness and courage of a people, ready to make any sacrifice to make Chile a freer, more prosperous, more just and fraternal country, which is, by definition, to achieve half of integral development. In all this, we know we could count on, and continue to do so, the prayers of the Pope and millions of men and women of good will all over the world.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
What Would Happen If We ‘Forgive’ Student Loan Debt?
Student debt has e a hot issue this election season, with both Democratic candidates —Clinton and Sanders — offering proposals for forgiving student loans. But what would happen if the U.S. actually forgave student debt? Would the loans simply vanish? Would tuition prices decline? Economist Don Boudreauxexplains what really happens and why “debt forgiveness” merely transfers the debt to others. ...
Video: William B. Allen on the Common Foundation of Christianity and Modern Politics
On Thursday, June 16th, it was a great pleasure to e William B. Allen – Emeritus Professor of Political Philosophy and Emeritus Dean of James Madison College at Michigan State University – as a plenary speaker at Acton University 2016, to deliver an address entitled “A Moral Surprise: The Common Foundation of Christianity and Modern Politics.” Allen used his address to argue that true political freedom requires freedom of conscience as its foundation – a freedom of conscience that cannot...
How Kentucky Schools Are Rejecting the ‘College Readiness’ Cookie Cutter
Fueled by a mix of misguided cultural pressures and misaligned government incentives, college tuition has been rising for decades, outpacing general inflation by a wide margin. Yet despite the underlying problems, our politicians seem increasingly inclined to cement the status quo. Whether it beincreasedsubsidies for student loans or promises of“free college” for all, such solutions simply double down on our failedcookie-cutter approach to education and vocation, narrowing rather than expanding the range of opportunities and possibilities. Fortunately, despite such aninept...
Community and Economic Development: Transforming Our Cities Through Love
Growing up impoverished in the Grand Rapids area himself, Justin Beene brings a unique perspective to his lecture on Community and Economic Development. He has seen first-hand the good intentions behind top-down investing to eliminate poverty and racial injustice, and the consequential damage wreaked upon munities. Urban cities have largely been developed through three forces: gentrification, pouring resources into them, munity development. Beene asserts that we need to cut off top-down funding and start supporting neighborhoods in solving their own...
Patriotism, Politics and Christianity
Between the outrageous actions of legislators, controversial supreme court decisions and the ing presidential election, every day the news is bombarded with stories and opinions that do not coincide with biblical convictions. This seems to leave many Christians in the United States despairing, disillusioned and detached. While they certainly have legitimate troubles, I’m concerned when I see my fellow Americans retreating from interest in the public sphere because they are so bothered by “the way this country is headed.” Regardless...
Democratic Party Platform Draft Includes $15 Minimum Wage
Sometimes predicting the future is difficult (ask anyone who thought we’d have flying cars by now). But sometimes foreseeing what is going to happen — at least to a high degree of probability — is all too easy. For example, it’s fairly simple to ascertain that sometime in 2017 or 2018 we will see a huge spike in the unemployment for the working poor and increasing the replacement of low-skilled jobs with automation (i.e., robots). The reason: the $15 minimum...
Why Churches Should Be Tax Exempt
Churches and other religious institutions in American are almost always exempt from federal, state, and local taxes. The justification for this policy is usually that such institutions provide vital charitable benefits to society. While that is undoubtably true the benefits argument is not the strongest reason to support tax exemption. A better reason is that we need to maintain a distinction between the state and the church. As Richard W. Garnett and Paul J. Schierl explain, the separation of church...
For Girls, Sexual Abuse Is the Prison Pipeline
The current debate surrounding overcriminalization and juvenile incarceration is often centered around the male prison population. The debate increasingly overlooks the problems that face young girls caught in the prison pipeline to juvenile detention. New data in the past several years has shown that the prison pipeline for girls often includes a pattern of sexual abuse that is not present in cases involving male delinquents. A 2015 report published by Georgetown Law’s Center on Poverty and Inequality found that girls...
Overproduction and stewardship
Overproduction, simply put, is supply in excess of demand. It is the production of more goods and services than those in the market would like to purchase.Overproduction, in a well functioning market economy, should be temporary.In a dynamic market driven by entrepreneurs,resources e allocated towards their most highly valued uses. If some clever entrepreneur makes a million shoes, but only sells two pairs, he will be unlikely to overproduce in the future. This is good, because the overproduction signals to...
Now Available: 92 Lectures from Acton University
We’re pleased to announce that we’ve added 92 lectures from Acton University 2016 to our digital download store! You can pick up the evening plenary lectures from Magatte Wade, Vernon Smith, William Allen, and Acton President Rev. Robert A. Sirico for free – and then select audio froma wide variety of speakers on a diverse range oftopics from the daily sessions, including addresses by intellectuals and experts like Michael Novak , Kim Tan, and Prof. Peter Kreeft, among others. Nobel...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved