Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Removing the scales: Peter Boettke on the public purpose of economics
Removing the scales: Peter Boettke on the public purpose of economics
Dec 28, 2025 9:48 PM

Whenever a new economic policy is proposed or introduced, we are immediately confronted by a wave of pundits and pontificators, each offering their own spin on its real-world implications. Far too often, however, such analysis gives way to a flurry of passions: emotional, ideological, and otherwise.

Which begs the question: What is the public purpose of the economist?

According to economist Peter Boettke, it has to do with the illumination of truth, not only about market processes, but political processes, as well. It is the economist’s responsibility to explain the particulars of a policy, but also to “remove the scales from the eyes of the public” when es to the more fundamental forces and wider implications.

This is a difficult task, partly because such processes can be difficult to understand, and partly because vested interests often wield their powers of persuasion.For Boettke, however, neither of these poses the greatest threat or obstacle:

To this day I believe ideology and ignorance are perhaps more critical issues than interests and rational ignorance. I retain faith that if we economists do our job and explain clearly and concisely the logic of economic forcesat work, and expose the public to the true costs and benefits, and who gains and whose expense, then a lot of bad public policies would cease to find popular support, and even more so, certain cherished ideological beliefs would be abandoned. Reason and Evidence, not Passionate Emotions and Primitive Intuitions, can be the guide to policy, and result in peace and prosperity and general human flourishing.

…I realize that is a certain type of romance as well. I believe scholars are truth-seekers, so economists are tellers of the truth, and if done to the best of their ability and munication skills as good as humanly possible, the economist as student of society, as social critic, and ultimately as teacher can do their job to eradicate ignorance, and in doing so set democratic societies (through public opinion) on the successful path to address the social ills of poverty and squalor as well (as opposed to the frustrating path we have followed). The public purpose of economics is to be great “teachers” of the economic forcesat work, and to be able to explain how alternative institutional arrangements either promote peaceful cooperation and productive specialization among individuals (the invisible hand) or frustrate the efforts to realize the gains from trade and stifle the efforts to realize the gains from innovation (dynamics of interventionism).

This doesn’t mean that we should blindly submit or subscribe to cold economic models. The removal of passions and “primitive intuitions” does not mean the removal of ethics or humility. As Boettke explains elsewhere, economists serve as “cautionary prophets,” not all-knowing engineers.

To the contrary, in order to properly teach and reveal what needs to be learned, economists will need more than mere mathematics:

The world plex, and there are many parts moving at once and in different directions in human societies so the real-world appears to us as a muddle and unearthing the governing dynamics requires analytically a surgical precision with fine instruments of reason and evidence, and not blunt force instruments. That is theartas well as thescienceof economics and political economy.

But down deep I am today as persuaded by the role that economics properly done can have on the public imagination as I was when I read my first economic works and listened to Dr. Sennholz’s words for the first time. The scales really did get removed from my eyes, and I want to in turn share the ‘good news’ of economic science with other unsuspecting fellow citizens to eradicate public ignorance on economic affairs and in so doing set us on a more productive path to address other social ills such as poverty, squalor and idleness.

Indeed, “removing the scales” will require a view that goes before and beyond the typical economic analysis, one that assumes a proper view of the human person and a corresponding moral imagination.For Boettke’s prioritization of “reason and evidence” to prevail, it will demand a bit more reinforcement.

For the “good news of economics science” to actually resonate, it will need the anthropology necessary to connect the dots, and as Christians, this is our invitation.

Image: Carlotta Silvestrini, CC0

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
You Are in the Image of God
The theme for this week’s Acton Commentary, “The Image of God and You,” struck me while I was rocking my baby son in the early morning hours. In the dim light he reached up and gently touched my face, and it occurred to me how parents are so prone to see the image of God in their children. And yet I wondered what it might be like for a child to look into the face of a parent. What would...
Northern Iraq: 2000 Years Of Christianity Wiped Out By ISIS
This past Sunday, for the first time in 2,000 years, no Christians received Holy Communion in Nineveh. The Islamic militants have eradicated the Christian population in the northern Iraqi city. The few Christians that remain are either too old or sick to escape. Canon Andrew White, Anglican vicar of Baghdad, told The Telegraph that churches have been turned into offices for the Islamic militants, crosses removed. No Christians, he says, want to be there. Last week there was munion in...
‘Abraham Kuyper Goes Pop’ In For The Life Of The World Series
Andy Crouch, Christian author, musician and former Acton University plenary speaker, reviews For the Life of the World, a new curriculum series produced by the Acton Institute. In the newest edition of Christianity Today, Crouch discusses how this series takes the Dutch Reformed theology of Abraham Kuyper and “pops” it in a whole new direction. The result, Crouch says, is inventive, profound and rewarding. With the intention of attempting to “articulate core concepts of oikonomia (stewardship), anamnesis (remembering), and prolepsis...
Provoking Backlashes to Shut Down ALEC, Political Debate
I listen to National Public Radio nearly on a daily basis even though I know there are far-more productive ways to spend one’s time. On today’s “Diane Rehm Show,” the discussion was on the American Legislative Exchange Council, how much cash it received from bogeymen-of-the-left Charles and David Koch, and climate change. ALEC Chief Executive Officer Lisa B. Nelson appeared on the program and predictably endured rude interruptions from her host, ical charges from fellow guests, Tom Hamburger, Washington Post...
‘What Our Schools Need’
The Faith Movement, based in the United Kingdom, seeks to bring clergy, religious and lay faithful together to advance the Catholic faith, educating both believers and non-believers regarding the Church. Their website includes book reviews, and Eric Hester currently has a review of the Acton Institute’s Catholic Education in the West: Roots, Reality and Revival. Hester writes: At the heart of this most important little book is what The Catechism of the Catholic Church states: “the right and duty of...
Samuel Gregg: Europe Is Rotting
Sam Gregg, Acton’s Director of Research, bemoans the state of Europe in The American Spectator today. In a piece entitled, “Something is Rotten in the State of Europe,” Gregg begins by noting that Germany seems to have lost mon sense. William Shakespeare knew a thing or two about human psychology. But he also understood a great deal about the body-politic and how small signs can be indicative of deeper traumas. So when Marcellus tells Horatio at the beginning of Hamlet...
Profiting from Prisoners: How Prisons are Exploiting the Poor
Imagine you have a family member who has been in prison for a month. You decide to send them some money to buy a tube of toothpaste from the prison store. How much would you need to send them? At some prisons you’d need to send $130. Jails often deduct intake fees, medical co-pays, and the cost of basic toiletries first, leaving the prisoner’s account with a negative balance. To provide enough money for them to buy that initial tube...
5 Reasons Americans Still Can’t Find A Job (And It’s Probably Not What You Think)
According to the U.S. Department of Labor, unemployment across the country is at about 6.1 percent (here in Michigan, it’s at 7.4 percent, which puts us in the bottom 10 states.) That means a lot of folks are still struggling to find a job, or a job where they are not underemployed. Peter Morici, an economist at the University of Maryland give 5 reasons for this. Have all the “good” jobs moved overseas? Do we need to raise the minimum...
Acton Rome Office Hosts PovertyCure Conference for Seminarians
On Tuesday Istituto Acton, the Acton Institute’s Rome pleted its two-day PovertyCure conference for seminarians and faculty of the Pontifical Urban College in Rome. The conference served as part of the students’ pastoral formation before the academic year begins next week. The event also marked the first full and official screening of the PovertyCure DVD Series in the Italian language. Episodes 1-4 of the DVD Series were shown on day one of the conference, Sept. 29, and Episodes 5-6 were...
The Employer-Employee Relationship as an Opportunity for Worship
Employer/employee relationships, in themselves, are not morally neutral, says Wayne Grudem, but are fundamentally good and pleasing to God because they provide many opportunities to imitate God’s character and so glorify him. Employer/employee relationships provide many opportunities for glorifying God. On both sides of the transaction, we can imitate God, and he will take pleasure in us when he sees us showing honesty, fairness, trustworthiness, kindness, wisdom, and skill, and keeping our word regarding how much we promised to pay...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved