Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Is economics an ideology?
Is economics an ideology?
Dec 10, 2025 9:31 AM

‘Ludwig von Mises’ by Ludwig von Mises Institute CC BY-SA 3.0

Richard H. Spady, research professor of Economics at Johns Hopkins, has recently published a piece at First Things entitled ‘Economics as Ideology’ in which he explores some contemporary trends among economists and their use of economics as a Procrustean bed to reshape society in its own image,

A body of thought is “ideological” when it will­fully projects its own first principles on its subject matter and actively seeks, perhaps unconsciously, material changes to bring social realities into conformity with these first principles.

It is a thoughtful essay and chronicles some worrying trends within the both the discipline of economics and in society at large. I’ve defended economists before (See ‘Misreading capitalism’) but they are not above reproach. For economics to be a force for human flourishing it must be grounded in the liberal tradition from which the discipline itself emerged.

Lord Acton famously said that liberty is the delicate fruit of a mature civilization. His life’s ambition was to write a history of the growth and maturation of the idea of freedom (See my introduction to Lord Acton: Historical and Moral Essays for an outline of the triumphs and tribulations of this massive project). Acton sought to trace the development of the idea because,

The history of institutions is often a history of deception and illusions; for their virtue depends on the ideas that produce and on the spirit that preserves them, and the form may remain unaltered when the substance has passed away.

Churches, states, and all the institutions that constitute our social life which have sought to embrace human freedom have done so unevenly and haphazardly so it is not surprising that the economics profession has done so as well. Peter Boettke is engaged in a project similar to Acton’s seeking to trace the idea of economics through history separating what he calls the ‘mainline’ economic tradition which endures and grows from the ‘mainstream’ economic practice which is whatever economists happen to be doing at the moment (See Living Economics). When the science fiction author Theodore Sturgeon grew frustrated of defending his often maligned genre he responded by coining Sturgeon’s Law acknowledging what everyone knows by experience, that ninety percent of everything is terrible. That shouldn’t prevent us from treasuring and learning from the wondrous ten percent.

That wondrous ten percent of economics emerged from a long liberal tradition. Lord Acton traced this tradition through the world of antiquity in ancient Israel, Greece, and Rome (See History of Freedom in Antiquity) and the later medieval Christian synthesis and elaboration of this tradition (See History of Freedom in Christianity). Acton reminds us that it is the savior himself that introduces the idea of rendering to Caesar the things which are Caesar’s and to God the things which are God’s (Matt. 22:21). Theologians began to examine the nature of exchange (See Sources in Early Modern Economics, Ethics, and Law) and attitudes toward exchange began to change in the wake of this sustained reflection. The origin of the discipline of economics itself is often credited to a professor of moral philosophy, Adam Smith.

The advances in political and economic freedom realized with our imperfect embodiment of the liberal tradition are real but they do not alone constitute the good life (See ‘Give socialism a try? Let’s not.’). In his book Liberalism Ludwig von Mises rightly articulates the limits of economics and social policy,

Social policy, with the means that are at its disposal, can make men rich or poor, but it can never succeed in making them happy or in satisfying their inmost yearnings. Here all external expedients fail. All that social policy can do is to remove the outer causes of pain and suffering; it can further a system that feeds the hungry, clothes the naked, and houses the homeless.

All of life is economic, but economics is not all of life. To put our trust in economists is as mistaken as putting our trust in princes, “Man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God.” (Matt. 4:4)

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
Acton Institute to Sponsor ‘Faith at Work Summit’
Conversations about “faith-work integration” are alive and well, whether in the church, workplace, or academia, and the Acton Institute continues to offer a variety of resources on the subject, from its growing series of tradition-specific primers to various books and lectures to educational video curricula. In keeping with these efforts, the Acton Institute will be a co-sponsor to the very first Faith @ Work Summit in Boston, MA from October 24-25, where a diverse group of businesspeople, students, pastors, and...
ISIS and Christian Just War Teaching
Christians from a broad range of traditions — from Chaldean Catholics to Southern Baptists — are uniting in a call for military action against mon enemy: ISIS. As Mark Tooley notes, the persecution of religious believers by the Islamic extremists has “reanimated talk about Christian Just War teaching.” Citing the call by Iraq’s Chaldean Patriarch for military intervention, a group of prominent Christian thinkers, with others, has declared that “nothing short of the destruction of ISIS/ISIL as a fighting force...
Every Market Form in a Single Chart
Reading through the German economist Walter Eucken’s work The Foundation of Economics (1951), I came across one of the most helpful charts for economic analysis I have yet to find. In it, Eucken gives every possible form of market in a single table: The Foundation of Economics, p. 158 Eucken adds four qualifications that are important to keep in mind: “These forms of market are actual forms which have been or are to be found in actual economic life (often...
Radio Free Acton: The Intellectual Life of Edmund Burke, Part II
This week on Radio Free Acton, Michael Matheson Miller continues his conversation with David Bromwich, Sterling Professor of English at Yale University, on the thought of Edmund Burke. Bromwich is the author of The Intellectual Life of Edmund Burke, the first volume of what will be a two-volume intellectual biography of Burke. We kick off this portion of the conversation with some analysis of Burke’s position on free markets and crony capitalism.. To listen to Part 2 of Miller’s interview...
Dear Pope Benedict: We Are Sorry
In 2006, then-Pope Benedict made a speech at Regensburg. As papal speeches go, it wasn’t a “biggie;” it was an address to a meeting of scientists. What was to be a reflection on faith, reason and science quickly became a firestorm. Benedict was accused of being anti-Islamic, offensive, insensitive and out-of-touch. The primary problem was that what he really said was taken entirely out of context. In his 30 minute speech, the pope quotes an ancient emperor on the theme...
Is Having Children Too Expensive? (Wrong Question!)
The cost of raising kids in the United States has reportedly gone up, averaging $245,340 per child according to a recent report by the U.S. Department of Agriculture, which factors in costs for housing, food, clothing, healthcare, education, toys, and more. From the Associated Press: A child born in 2013 will cost a e American family an average of $245,340 until he or she reaches the age of 18, with families living in the Northeast taking on a greater burden,...
Family Farmers Fined for Following Their Conscience
First it was bakers, florists, and photographers. Now you can add farmers to the list of occupations that people pelled by law to serve ends they deem unethical and in violation of their consciences. New York State has fined Cynthia and Robert Gifford $13,000 for acting on their belief thatmarriage is the union of a man and womanand thus declining to rent out their family farm for a same-sex wedding celebration. AsLeslie Ford and Ryan Anderson explain, Unfortunately,New York’s Human...
‘Obscene’ Persecution Of Christians Requires Response
Ronald S. Lauder is the president of the World Jewish Congress. He wants his fellow Jews to speak out and stand up against the persecution of Christians, especially at the hands of ISIS. He calls the current situation in Iraq “Nazi-like,” and that the situation has failed to garner attention from political leaders, aging rock stars, and the world in general. He maintains that ISIS is not a loosely organized group of rag-tag jihadists, but …a real military force that...
The God Who Makes Himself Known Through Vocation
It was Blaise Pascal who noted that, “Jesus Christ is the end of all, and the center to which all tends.” Whether we are conscious of it or not, our vocation and work plays a part in revealing His glory. es to meet us in our vocation and circumstances. Cyril of Jerusalem declared: The es in various forms to each man for his profit. For to those who lack joy, He es a vine, to those who wish to enter...
Why the Looters Will Have the Most Lasting Impact on Ferguson
“They say they want justice for Mike Brown,” says Mumtaz Lalani, an store owner in Ferguson, Missouri, “Is this justice? I don’t understand. What justice is this? Lalani was referring to the looters who, on Saturday, robbed his store and attempted to burn it down. The events in Ferguson are heartbreaking, but they will soon be all-but-forgotten. Within a few weeks the media—and the public’s limited attention—will move on to another story. Within a few months the criminal justice system...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved