Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Examining the moral basis of Pope Francis’ pleas for financial regulation – and the morality of ‘speculation’
Examining the moral basis of Pope Francis’ pleas for financial regulation – and the morality of ‘speculation’
Feb 20, 2026 12:43 PM

As Pope Francis recognizes, speculation is part-and-parcel of the modern economic world. He also plainly believes that it is subject to the demands of morality and justice. The question thus es: How do we judge whether any act of speculation is right and just, or wrong and unjust?

Read More…

In his Prayer Intentions for May 2021, Pope Francis is asking that Catholics pray for strict regulation of financial markets to protect the poor. But is strict government oversight what really protects the vulnerable from financial harm?

“If finance is unregulated, it es pure speculation driven by various monetary policies, the Pope said. “This situation is unsustainable. And it is dangerous. So that the poor do not suffer painful consequences from this system, financial speculation must be carefully regulated. Speculation. I want to underline that term.May finance be a form of service, and an instrument to serve the people, and to care for mon home!”

It’s not unusual for speculation to be treated with considerable wariness. In 2004, for instance, a document issued by the World Council of Churches even placed money-laundering and speculation under the same heading. The meaning of the term is also elastic. Writing in the late-1920s, the Jesuit economist Oswald von mented that “one general definition [of speculation] cannot capture all the nuances.”

In its fundamentals, speculation is about the future – specifically, navigating through and profiting from the uncertainties associated with the future. A hedge fund, for instance, borrows large amounts of money to speculate upon the future worth of, say, modity or a currency over varying periods of time. “Forward dealings,” as they are called, seek to capitalize upon expected price movements on goods, products, or shares over a period of time in the hope of selling high and buying low. Such dealings can involve also buying or selling goods at a later date at a fixed price in the expectation that, in the meantime, prices will fall (a “bear” transaction) or rise (a “bull” transaction).

But when a hedge fund decides to go “long” or “short” on the future price of a good, it rarely does so on a whim. Instead it acts on the basis of a calculated risk. Such businesses usually employ large numbers of forecasters, traders and mathematical modelers in an effort to make as accurate a speculative estimate as possible. Though often caricatured as an activity that produces enormous gain on the basis of little labor, speculation actually involves large amounts of work undertaken by highly knowledgeable groups of people who stand to lose a great deal if they make significant errors in judgment.

As Pope Francis recognizes, speculation is part-and-parcel of the modern economic world. He also plainly believes that it is subject to the demands of morality and justice. The question thus es: How do we judge whether any act of speculation is right and just, or wrong and unjust?

We’re all speculators

At the most elemental level, any reflection on speculation’s moral dimension should begin with recognition that all economic activity contains an element of speculation. Everyone needs to make choices about how they spend and invest their e within a context of uncertainty and based upon imperfect knowledge of the future. Even the mundane activity of placing some of our capital in a savings account at our local bank involves some speculation insofar as we make the assessment – as opposed to knowing with absolute certainty – that the bank will remain solvent.

Like all human acts, the morality of a free choice deemed to be speculative requires close examination of the specifics of that choice. The first point to make is any act of speculation based on telling falsehoods (whether outright lies or spreading rumors about the future economic prospects of a given good) is always wrong because the choice to lie is in itself, at least from the standpoint of Christian ethics and natural law, an intrinsically evil act.

Such acts, however, are very different from the type of speculation that involves 1) no choice of evil and 2) making prudential judgments about what we buy and sell in the marketplace in light of what we judge is likely to happen in the future on the basis of knowledge, experience and evidence. Risk-assessment is integral to such acts, and ascertaining the reasonableness of assuming a given risk is central to the moral analysis of any act of speculation. The higher the risk, the greater the degree of the due diligence which can be reasonably demanded.

Reflecting on these and other factors in the mid-20th century, the economist, lawyer and Austrian priest Johannes Messner listed several criteria as essential for determining whether a given act of speculation was just. In addition to underscoring that lying or theft automatically rendered a speculative act evil, Messner specified that a just act of speculation required (1) a thorough knowledge of the present state of the market; (2) adequate study of the influences upon the possible development of supply and demand; (3) a serious effort to discern possible tendencies in the marketplace; and (4) a prudent engagement of capital that does not unduly risk the speculator’s ability to meet his existing liabilities.

The first three of Messner’s guidelines are essentially counsels to choose and act prudently so as to calibrate risk responsibly. The fourth criteria reflects the requirement to respect the demands mutative justice. In other words, speculation cannot promise your ability to meet your pre-existing contractual obligations to others.

Finance, futures and basic needs

mon criticism of speculation is that it can negatively affect some people’s access to some basic necessities of life. The objection is that speculators who expect an increase in the price of a good and consequently buy many future contracts effectively drive up the price of goods for which there is presently a high demand, thereby putting them beyond the reach of those with less material resources.

There are instances in which speculation can distort prices. Someone who owns a futures position larger than the supply of the underlying deliverable good available at the market price might be able to “corner the market” and drive up prices. The evidence suggests, however, that this is always a transient effect and that such cases are also relatively rare. Indeed, direct evidence for a strong relationship between substantive price movements and speculative activity is very weak.

Sudden price increases are more adequately explained by dramatic increases in demand for a given bined with a relatively static supply of that same good. Over the long and medium term, the price of something like food in the conditions of a market economy is determined by the forces of supply and demand. If agricultural industries produce enough food to meet or even exceed demand, agricultural prices will fall. These are the factors that ultimately drive food prices – not speculation.

Nor is there much evidence to support the argument that the profits made by speculators in futures markets are made at the poor’s expense. To grasp this point, we need to understand precisely how speculation in futures markets works.

If you need 2,000 bushels of wheat today, you have to pay the present going price of a bushel of wheat that’s needed today. This is known as the spot price (say, $100). Imagine, however, that you don’t need the 2,000 bushels today, but you will need them in one year’s time. The futures market allows you to buy these bushels for delivery in one year’s time at the futures price of $90. The farmer is willing to sell you these bushels because it guarantees him a sale. This mutually beneficial arrangement is mediated through a futures contract.

The futures market, however, also allows you to buy bushels of wheat without you having any intention of receiving them yourself from the farmer. In these cases, you contract with the farmer for the same 2,000 bushels at the lower futures price with the bushels to be delivered to the holder of the contract in one year’s time.By purchasing the contract, you do so in the hope that you can sell it to someone else prior to the delivery at a price closer to the higher spot price.

If the supply of wheat remains stable, those who anticipate they will need 2,000 bushels of wheat in a year’s time may inquire if I am willing to sell them my contract.In such instances, I break even. If, however, demand for wheat grows, they may seek to pay more for my futures contract than they otherwise would.In this instance, I make a profit. But if the wheat supply turns out to be greater than expected, those who need the wheat will very likely be able to secure a better deal from someone other than myself. In these circumstances, if I sell my futures contract, it might well be for less than the price I paid in the beginning – in this case, I lose money.

What’s important to note here is that the speculator’s ability to make a profit does not emanate from cheating anyone. Nor does it arise from any magical ability on the speculator’s part to make the wheat price increase. Instead, I only derive a profit if I correctly estimate that the demand would be greater than the supply at a particular point in the future.Likewise, my loss would proceed from my failure to ascertain that the supply was going to outstrip demand in a year’s time. In any case, it is not futures markets that puts necessities beyond the poor’s capacity to pay. That is a question of supply and demand – not speculation on future prices.

Speculation as stabilizer

Beyond the morality of a given act of speculation, it’s worth highlighting how speculation can contribute to the more efficient use of economic resources and greater stability in the availability of these goods for everyone, including those on the e scale’s lower end. How so?

Speculation can smooth the relative stability of economic life by helping to calibrate the supply and demand of many goods beyond the short-term. To use the same example of wheat: If the futures price for wheat goes up, this indicates that a critical mass of those who analyze future trends in the wheat industry believe that prices are going to increase in the future. This market signal tells farmers that they need to plant, grow and harvest more wheat. This enhances the availability of wheat for all and keeps wheat prices stable, if not down.

But speculation also allows consumers of wheat like panies and bakers to protect themselves from sudden upward price movements in the future by locking in what they estimate to be a lower future price. And it is not just the producers who benefit. To the extent that speculation helps to steady and lock in lower prices over the medium- and long-term, it allows everyone to make economic choices in circumstances of greater certainty.

None of this is to deny that problems in financial markets can occur. Too much liquidity in the financial system can result in too much money being used to speculate on a limited number of goods, currencies modities. Observe, however, that once again, the problem is not speculation per se. The problem is excessive liquidity in financial markets, often courtesy of excessively loose monetary policy pursued by central banks. It’s not impossible that when Pope Francis said, “If finance is unregulated, it es pure speculation driven by various monetary policies,” this was what he actually meant.

Pope Francis insists that finance and financial markets should be at the service of people. He’s right. And speculation is an integral part of those markets. Like any freely willed human act, it is subject to the demands of morality. In making such judgments, however, it’s important to know what is involved. Otherwise, it would be all too easy to contribute to the demonizing of a financial practice that, in many respects, renders considerable service to mon good’s economic dimension.

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
Sir Roger Scruton was a fearless ‘Knight of the West’
The late Sir Roger Scruton has been given many titles since his death on January 12. He’s been hailed as the “greatest conservative thinker of our age,” Britain’s “intellectual dissident” and beauty’s best modern defender. For Samuel Gregg, he will be forever remembered “as a gentle Knight of the Realm, but above all a fearless Knight of the West.” Writing at Law & Liberty, Gregg recalls Scruton’s fearlessness in the face of harassment endured for decades. Scruton was an unapologetic...
Generosity through trade: The power of giving and receiving
In cultivating a Christian ethic of economic generosity, we tend to focus heavily on traditional acts of charity—donating our dollars, volunteering our time, and so on. Likewise, in heeding Jesus’ call in Matthew 25 to serve the “least of these,” we often think through the lens of one-way material transfers. Yet throughout the Biblical story, we also see generosity manifest in the context of relationship. Sacrifice is paired with partnership, with giving finding much of its meaning in the receiving....
Acton Line podcast: How should Christians engage the world? In conversation with Abraham Kuyper
Central to the mission of the Acton Institute is educating people of faith about the connections that exist between religious life and economic thinking. Abraham Kuyper helped lay the groundwork for this mission by establishing why it’s important for Christians to be involved in the public square. Kuyper was a Dutch politician and a Reformed theologian during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. During his career, he wrote many books about theology, culture, business, and so much more, and...
Law & Liberty forum helps break down free markets versus economic nationalism debate
Since 2015, I have spent more time than I could ever have imagined debating the issue of whether free markets are more optimal for the United States (or any other country) than the various policies usually grouped together under the phrase “economic nationalism.” It’s a discussion that touches on questions ranging from the place of economics in determining policy to issues of foreign policy (most particularly, America’s relationship with China) and the economic role of the state. It also has...
Warren wants to stop Russia from spreading disinformation, like she does
Today is the Iowa caucuses. For Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-MA), it may be a campaign-defining day. Her support has been waning in the polls in what should be one of her strongest states. If she doesn’t garner at least 15% support, she won’t get any Iowan delegates and likely won’t end up the Democratic party’s presidential nominee. The excitement and tension is palpable. Can’t you feel it? (No? Just me?) Well, I’m excited because Warren has run a unique campaign....
Catholics and classical liberals, yesterday and today
In many countries, debates we had 40 years ago are starting to be rehashed: can one be both a Catholic and a classical liberal? It’s good to remember some of the arguments that liberal Catholics used then to justify their positions. The Spanish priest Enrique Menéndez Ureña, SJ (1939-2014) started to work on this topic in the late 70s and early 80s. His work culminated in the book The Myth of Socialist Christianity, first published in 1981 as El Mito...
Acton Institute ranks among world’s best in 2019 think tank report
A report on the global impact of think tanks has ranked the Acton Institute among the world’s most influential thought leaders. The University of Pennsylvania released its “2019 Global Go To Think Tank Index Report” last Friday. This year, the annual report – which was “designed to identify and recognize centers of excellence in all the major areas of public policy research” – opened the ratings to all 8,248 think tanks in its database. The report has recognized the Acton...
Brexit restores the UK’s national character
After a bitter, three-and-a-half year political battle, the UK will leave the European Union at 11 p.m. on Friday, January 31, 2020. Brexit returns control of British political institutions, immigration laws, regulatory standards, and free trade policies to its citizens. That is, Brexit empowers the British people to determine their own destiny. “Brexit was really about a fundamental desire of humanity: our thirst for liberty,” writes Rev. Richard Turnbull ina new analysisfor the Acton Institute’sReligion & Liberty Transatlanticwebsite. Rev. Turnbull,...
5 times President Trump attacked socialism in the 2020 State of the Union
President Donald Trump delivered the 2020 State of the Union address on Tuesday night, the ninety-seventh to be given in person and the third of his presidency. In addition to touting a booming economy and highlighting the heroism of the Tuskegee Airmen and other groundbreaking Americans, the president attacked socialism, in the U.S. and abroad, at least five times. Here are the ways President Trump opposed socialism or its premises during the 2020 State of the Union address: 1. “Socialism...
Samuel Gregg: ‘Economic nationalism will not make America great again’
In early January, Samuel Gregg explained at Law & Liberty how economic policies driven by nationalist protectionism have, in many cases, eventually resulted in economic loss. Generally, protectionist policies are implemented in order to protect workers and industries, however, they also have the effect of throwing market incentives off balance. When a nation employing protectionist policies disincentivizes other countries from importing or exporting parative advantage in that nation’s industries is “dulled,” argues Gregg. “The more you protect the industry, the...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved