Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Israel and the Significance of Religion on Culture and Economics
Israel and the Significance of Religion on Culture and Economics
Jan 9, 2026 4:47 AM

Despite ongoing conflict and regional unrest, Israel’s economy is doing exceptionally well. Unemployment is under six percent, es are up, and the Index of Economic Freedom shows Israel’s rank improving over the last few years while America and many Western European nations are declining. Acton’s Director of Research, Samuel Gregg, discusses this situation in a new article for the Jerusalem Post. He says:

[I]t’s no exaggeration to say that many developed economies – mired in debt, out-of-control welfare spending and high unemployment – would envy the Israeli economy’s current overall trajectory.

It’s the economist’s job to try and understand why some economies, like Israel’s, are paratively better than others. Less well-known, however, is that more economists are looking beyond strictly economic explanations to explain economic successes and failures. As it turns out, they are discovering that culture matters.

He discusses Edmund Phelps, the 2006 Nobel economist whose thesis stated that while “good policy is important, the mitments prevailing in a society explain why economics with very similar structures and institutions can produce quite different economic es.” Gregg continues:

…developed nations which attach higher value to economic security than economic freedom run a higher risk of economic decline in an petitive global economy.

This, Phelps maintains, helps to explain why much of Western Europe is apparently incapable of engaging in substantive economic reform. If most Western Europeans are asked what they value more – liberty or security – you can safely bet they will nominate security. Placing a premium on security has economic consequences and helps explain why Western Europe has such low levels of entrepreneurship and pared to America.

Culture’s economic significance, however, goes beyond the liberty/security nexus. It’s not a coincidence that the word “culture” is derived from the word “cult.” This reflects the fact that a society’s dominant cult – i.e., religion – is always central to its culture. That suggests that more attention should be paid to religion’s role in shaping economic es. Is it the case that a society like Israel – the Jewish homeland for the Jewish people, with a majority of Jewish citizens (with obviously varying levels of mitment) – is more likely to emphasize certain values which, in turn, will have particular economic consequences? This isn’t a new discussion. 110 years ago, Max Weber famously raised the issue in his Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism. While many scholars (including myself) have taken issue with Weber’s particular claim that certain forms of Protestant Christianity helped to facilitate capitalism’s emergence, few dispute that religious belief has some type of impact upon an economy’s character.

Religion is a significant part of of culture and the predominant religion of Israel, Judaism, is no different:

Judaism also articulates a linear understanding of history and holds that human freedom has a role in unfolding it. By contrast, Greco-Roman culture not only embodied circular conceptions of time, but their religions portrayed the gods as rather frivolous creatures who treated human beings as mere playthings. In other words, Judaism holds that neither the world nor the human beings who inhabit it are ultimately meaningless.

This is likely to facilitate very different perspectives on the significance of human choice and action, including in the economy.

Christianity was fortune enough to inherit Judaism’s emphasis upon these things. Indeed, scholars such as the sociologist Rodney Stark have pelling arguments to suggest that it was precisely because Judaism and Christianity prevailed over the Greco-Roman pagan religions that capitalism first developed and eventually flourished in Western Europe.

Read Gregg’s full piece, ‘Culture, Religion, and Israel’s Economy’ at the Jerusalem Post. Anyone in Jerusalem or the surrounding area is invited to attend an ing conference exploring similar themes next week. On September 9, 2015, Acton Institute and the Jerusalem Institute for Market Studies will hold a day-long conference in Jerusalem – “Judaism, Christianity, and the West: Building and Preserving the Institutions of Freedom.” It is a day long event going from 11AM until 5PM and will be held at the Notre Dame of Jerusalem Center. For more information about this event or to register to attend, please visitwww.acton.org/Jerusalem2015. This is the latest in the “One and Indivisible” conference series.

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
A Vietnamese Refugee and the Virtue of Sacrifice
Religion & Liberty recently interviewed former German war correspondent Uwe Siemon-Netto. He’s also the author of Triumph of the Absurd, a book chronicling his time covering the war in Vietnam. One of Siemon-Netto’s recurring themes is the still propped up line in the West that North Vietnam’s aggression was a “people’s revolution” or an act of liberation. A people’s revolution doesn’t execute soldiers who have laid down their arms or force large segments of the population in South Vietnam into...
Why a Basic Guaranteed Income Wouldn’t Work
For decades conservatives and libertarians have pondered ways to replace the defective American welfare state. One of the boldest and most controversial ideas is to simply give everyone a basic guaranteed e. Instead a variety of ad hoc welfare programs, people would simply be given cash. Matt Zwolinski outlines an example proposal that includes an unconditional cash grant — no strings attached. Just give people cash and leave them “free to spend it, or save it, in whatever way they...
Wanted: Code of Shareholder Ethics
With the mountain of books and articles that have been written about business ethics, one wonders why nothing much has been written on what we might call shareholder ethics. I’m thinking of religious shareholder activists such as As You Sow and the Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility. As it turns out, these groups trade on the moral status of their respective members to further agendas seldom related to matters of religious faith. Instead, the clergy and religious in shareholder activist...
A Christian Alternative to Unicorn Governance
The centuries-long debate between conservatives and progressives about governance, argues Michael Munger, is essentially a disagreement about a simple concept: whether the State is a unicorn. Unicorns, of course, are fabulous horse-like creatures with a large spiraling horn on their forehead. They eat rainbows, but can go without eating for years if necessary. They can carry enormous amounts of cargo without tiring. And their flatulence smells like pure, fresh strawberries, which makes riding behind them in a wagon a pleasure....
Think Things Are Getting Better For Girls In China? Not So
While Jezebel tells women to get fighting mad about having to pay more for deodorant than men, and HuffPo is worried about why women “really” shave their legs, real feminists (you know, those who care about all women [and men], from conception until natural death) are noting that girls in China are in no better shape than they were under the most draconian years of Communism. Girls are being abandoned: at train stations, at “baby hatches,” at orphanages, or simply...
Iraq: ‘We Are Surprised That Some Countries Of The World Are Silent About What Is Happening’
The Dominican Sisters of St. Catherine of Siena have served the munity in Mosul since 1877. In recent days, they have been keeping their order and the world informed of the horrifying situation there. On August 4, they wrote: As you perhaps know, concerning the situation in Mosul, the Islamic State has a policy in governing the city. After displacing the Christians, they started their policy concerning the holy places that angered people. So far, the churches are under their...
Kuyper on the ‘Sacred Calling’ of Scholarship
The church has found a renewed interest in matters of “faith-work integration,” but while we hear plenty about following the voice of God in business and entrepreneurship, we hear very little about the world of academia.What does it mean, as a Christian, to be called to the work of scholarship? In Scholarship, a newly released collection of convocation addresses by Abraham Kuyper, we find a strong example of the type of reflection we ought to promote and embrace. For Kuyper,...
First Catholic Church In Decades To Be Built In Cuba
When Fidel Castro took over the island nation of Cuba, it officially e a nation of atheists. However, the munity in Cuba continued to worship – privately, where necessary – and attempted to maintain existing churches. Castro’s regime would not allow the building of any new churches. Now, there are plans to build a new church for the first time in fifty wars in Santiago, a city that suffered great damage from Hurricane Sandy two years ago. Santiago is home...
Get a Free Rental of ‘The Economy of Wonder’
For the Life of the World: Letters to the Exilesisa 7-part series from the Acton Institute that seeks to examine the bigger picture of Christianity’s role in culture, society, and the world. Each Monday until August 18 The Gospel Coalition (TGC) ishighlighting one episode and sharing an exclusive codefor a free 72-hour rental of the full episode. Here’s the trailer for episode 5,The Economy of Wonder. Visit TGC to get thecode for the free rental(you have to apply the code...
What does it mean to be civilized?
As a mother of five, there have been times when I was pretty sure “civilized” meant a dinner where no one called a sibling a name, everyone ate with utensils, and whoever got assigned dish duty did it without grumbling. Maybe I was setting my sights a tad low. Joseph Pearce thoughtfully and concisely tackles the rather large question, “What is civilization?” While Pearce does the obvious (heads to Wikipedia for an answer), it’s clear that “civilization” is more than...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved