Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Israel and the Significance of Religion on Culture and Economics
Israel and the Significance of Religion on Culture and Economics
Nov 8, 2025 11:20 PM

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
Acton On Tap: The Real War On Women
Elise Hilton speaks at San Chez Bistro in Grand Rapids, Michigan – April 8, 2014 On Tuesday evening,Acton Communications Specialist Elise Hilton led a great discussion on the topic of “TheReal War On Women” at Acton On Tap, held at San Chez Bistro in Downtown Grand Rapids, Michigan. Beginning in 2010, the phrase “War on Women” mon in political discussions in the United States. Primarily, it has been used by those on the left who believe that there is an...
More War On Women: Surrogacy, Exploitation And Extortion
In some parts of the United States, it is legal to hire a surrogate to carry a baby. The surrogate is paid for her services, and then surrenders the baby to the adoptive parents. Shared Conception in Texas (a “surrogacy-friendly” state, according to their website) puts it this way when discussing fees: Sure there are a myriad of ways to make $20,000+ a year! To be honest, when you factor in morning sickness, sleepless nights, swollen ankles, doctor appointments, clinic...
Surrogacy As Human Trafficking
According to the Polaris Project, human trafficking is defined as, Human trafficking is a form of modern-day slavery where people profit from the control and exploitation of others. As defined under U.S. federal law, victims of human trafficking include children involved in the sex trade, adults age 18 or over who are coerced or deceived mercial sex acts, and anyone forced into different forms of “labor or services,” such as domestic workers held in a home, or farm-workers forced to...
Vatican Draws Connection Between Family Values, Economic Development
A prominent Catholic bishop recently told development experts at a UN meeting that the family is the time-tested “building block” of a charitable and economically prospering society. He said healthy, stable families allow “intergenerational solidarity” to take root in cultures, where the young gratuitously care for their elders, and vice versa, out of a fundamental Christian moral duty and capacity for human love. Archbishop Francis A. Chullikattfrom Bolghatti, India, made these remarks as the Holy See’s Permanent Observer, when seeking...
Kishore Jayabalan on ‘Faith, State, and the Economy’
Director of the Istituto Acton in Rome, Kishore Jayabalan, recently issued a video statement on the vital issues that will be addressed at the ing Rome Conference, ‘Faith, State, and the Economy: Perspectives from East and West.” Faith, State, and the Economy: Perspectives From East and West will take place on April 29 in Rome and is free and open to the public. Cardinal Joseph Zen, Bishop Emeritus of Hong Kong, will speak on “the political and economic challenges of...
Lessons in creative destruction from ‘Mike Mulligan and His Steam Shovel’
Creative destruction can be a painful thing, particularly when you’re the one being destroyed. I’ve been-there done-that, and when things hit, I can’t say that I cared too much aboutJoseph Schumpeter and his fancy ideas. Alas, even when we have a firm understanding of the long-term social and economic benefits of such destruction — that whatever pain we’re experiencing is for the “greater good” of humanity — we can’t help but feel unappreciated, devalued, and cast aside. Our work is...
Why Your Job Pushing Paper Can Help Change the World
More than at any time in the last hundred years, Christians (at least in those in America) are beginning to recognize that, as Greg Gilbert and Sebastian Traeger say, “our jobs are an arena in which God will work in us and through us to make us more like Jesus and to glorify himself.” Yet it’s often easier to recognize this truth in the abstract while failing to understand how it could be true for our own jobs. Say, for...
How Bitcoin Could Help the World’s Poor
Bitcoin is dead, long live Bitcoin. A few weeks ago the IRS killed off any chance that Bitcoin could e a mainstream currency. That’s probably for the best since it clears the way for it to e something much more important: the world’s pletely open financial network. Timothy B. Lee has a superb article explaining why this could be transformative. Lee highlights one particularly helpful innovation: One obvious application is international money transfers. Companies like Western Union and Moneygram can...
Explainer: What is Holy Week?
What is Holy Week? Holy Week is the week before Easter, a period which includes the religious holidays of Palm Sunday, Maundy Thursday, Good Friday, and Holy Saturday. Holy week does not include Easter Sunday. When did Holy Week get started? The first recording of a Holy Week observance was made by Egeria, a Gallic woman who made a pilgrimage to the Holy Land about 381-384. In an account of her travels she wrote for a group of women back...
Now Available: ‘Scholarship’ by Abraham Kuyper
“What should be the goal of university study and the goal of living and working in the sacred domain of scholarship?” –Abraham Kuyper Christian’s Library Press has just released a new translation of Abraham Kuyper’s Scholastica I and II, two convocation addresses delivered to Vrije Universiteit (Free University) during his two years as rector (first in 1889, and then again in 1900). The addresses are published under the title Scholarship, and demonstrate Kuyper’s core belief that “knowledge (curriculum) and behavior...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved