Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
The financial crisis is over, but markets still need moral attention
The financial crisis is over, but markets still need moral attention
Jan 27, 2026 6:14 PM

With the financial crisis nearly a decade behind us, and with the latest figures showing4.1 percent economic growth, the economic woes of yesteryear feel increasingly distant in our past.

Even still, it’s hard to avoid the sense that something remains amiss—that beneath the material successes and encouraging metrics about unemployment rates and Gross Domestic Product, our society continues to lack the moral fabric necessary for sustained and holistic economic flourishing.

In his book, Crisis of Responsibility, investment advisor David Bahnsen highlights that core concern, arguing that from Main Street to Wall Street to the halls of political power, we continue to witness a culture-wide deterioration of virtue. Such a decline, he argues, will inevitably find its way to our economic freedoms and institutions, diminishing each, in turn.

In a recent conversation with Jonah Goldberg, Bahnsen expands on those themes, noting the lopsided focus that the “pro-market” movement continues to put on surface-level features. As a result, we’ve neglected the moral arguments and cultural catechesis necessary for properly inhabiting our economic institutions and leveraging our range of channels for trade and exchange.

Why not lie about our balance sheets? Why should we pay our bills? Why not walk away from our debts when the going gets tough? Why not deceive and exploit our customers, if the laws allow for it—nay, if they encourageit?

Without the proper moral norms, Bahnsen explains, we enter into “a vicious cycle,” with the violation of those norms leading to “a breakdown of the sort of econometric necessities of a free market economy.” Such a breakdown does not just result in “bad people” or slippery ethics, of course. “It effects interest rates,” he explains. “It effects cost of money. It effects the nature merce in general. People can’t trust the other side.”

Calling himself a “big zealot for the Acton Institute” due to its focus on the moral foundations of the market economy, Bahnsen says that getting the connection right “is life or death for the future of free enterprise in our country.”

Indeed, it always has been.If our defenses of the free market are only focused on “rational self-interest” or the ripple effects our actions on the the economic growth of Industry X, the balance sheet of Company Y, or the pocketbook of Employee Z, we will soon forget the very premises that hold it all together. As Bahnsen explains:

Capitalism as a cultural institution so to speak is extremely important…and I believe was very important to our founders. It presupposed a certain morality, a virtuous people…I think we’ve spent a few decades —within conservatism, within people who are pro-market —trying to defend it econometrically…I think, net net…the Randian approach to markets has done more harm than good, because they have gotten virtually every conclusion right from almost entirely wrong premises.

To me…it is rooted in the dignity of the human person. My argument against someone walking away from their bank mortgage was not merely what it would do to credit spreads. It was that it robbed that person of their dignity, and that it denied the concepts of human accountability, responsibility, thrift, and virtue. Fundamentally, I’m a big pro-market guy, which means I’m fundamentally opposed to a lot of government intervention in the market, but that reasoning is not all pragmatic. It’s not all based on how we can maximize profit per share or how it grows GDP. I think those things are important, but they are all a consequence. Fundamentally, I think the human person is most stimulated and achieves the most joy when, in that paradigm, they are able to achieve their dreams not be a ward of the state.

That’s the story that ought to ground our economic action, and its one worth telling and re-telling, even or especially when the economic times seem bright and rosy. If we continue to forget and neglect the true sources of our economic successes, we will soon lack the moral imagination and wherewithal to sustain them.

“The good news is that by rolling up our sleeves and digging for the truth, by retrieving a right understanding of the human person, we can turn things around,” writes Robert Sirico in his book, Defending the Free Market. “…As long as we refuse to sell this birthright for a mess of materialist pottage, hope remains.”

Image: harpsandflowers, 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
Criminal Justice and Christian Forgiveness
Last Saturday a brief mentary of mine ran in the weekly Religion section of the Grand Rapids Press, “Chandler case exemplifies need to repent.” The occasion for the piece was the sentencing over the last few months of those convicted of involvement in the rape and murder of Janet Chandler in 1979 (more details about the case can be found in the Holland Sentinel’s special coverage section.) Chandler was a student at Holland’s Hope College at the time of her...
Romney and the Racism Charge
One element that came out in the aftermath of “Romney’s religion speech,” an event highly touted in the run-up and in days following, was the charge that Mormonism is essentially a racist faith (or at least was until 1978), and that in unabashedly embracing the “faith of his fathers” so publicly (and uncritically), Mitt Romney did not distance himself from or express enough of a critical attitude toward the official LDS policy regarding membership by blacks before 1978. One example...
Another Christmas Ad: Don’t Forget Universal Pre-K
Presidential candidate Hillary Clinton is spreading the Christmas cheer by posing as Santa Claus and handing out government programs to the taxpayer. Also, it looks like she is promising to deliver on the promised middle class tax cuts from the first Clinton administration. Universal health care and universal pre-K are part of her gift package. She’s certainly not a stingy Santa Claus. ...
A Christmastide Collect
“O GOD, who makest us glad with the yearly remembrance of the birth of thy only Son Jesus Christ; Grant that as we joyfully receive him for our Redeemer, so we may with sure confidence behold him when he e to be our Judge; who liveth and reigneth with thee and the Holy Ghost, one God, world without end. Amen.” “An Additional Collect for Christmastide,” Scottish Book of Common Prayer (1912). ...
Fortune Small Business “review” occasioned by a viewing of The Call of the Entrepreneur
Malika Worrell’s review of The Call of the Entrepreneur is a perfect storm of distorting prejudice, muddle, and simple factual errors. First, she says, “Much of Call’s 58-minute runtime is taken up with talking heads, most of whom are affiliated with the Acton Institute, affirming the film’s ideology that unfettered capitalism is inherently righteous.” This is incorrect, and I told her it was incorrect in our interview. The majority of interviewees in the film, from Brad Morgan to George Gilder,...
Books of Interest: Georgetown UP & WJK
Today’s post will look at the Georgetown University Press Religion & Ethics catalog and the Westminster John Knox Academic Update (series index): Titles from Georgetown University Press: Matthew S. Holland, Bonds of Affection: Civic Charity and the Making of America–Winthrop, Jefferson, and Lincoln (November 2007).Sheila Suess Kennedy and Wolfgang Beilefeld, Charitable Choice at Work: Evaluating Faith-Based Job Programs in the States (2006).Stephen V. Monsma and J. Christopher Soper, Faith, Hope, and Jobs: Welfare-to-Work in Los Angeles (2006). Titles from Westminster...
A Christmas Consumerism Criticism
Ramsey Wilson provides a thoughtful and valuable post on my previous entry on Christmas consumerism. Upon reflection, Wilson provides an important insight that makes explicit what was perhaps only implicit in my previous post. Wilson writes, “I hope and trust that the fellowship and exchange of gifts would point us toward reflection and remembrance of Who made possible such delights, and to take yet another step in the direction of knowing Him.” Amen. ...
More Books of Interest: IVP
For my money, some of the most interesting titles in recent years in the field of Christian scholarship e from IVP Academic (an imprint of InterVarsity Press). The latest catalog features an announcement of Thomas Oden’s How Africa Shaped the Christian Mind, as well as an interview with the author, which prompted a couple reflections. (The interview is available for pdf download here, Fall 2007) I remember my first teaching assignment, a survey course in American history. We were covering...
Hoosier Eugenics: A Horrible Centennial
I’m really proud of this essay. The history is very interesting; the philosophical and religious links are provocative; and the contemporary applications are important and wide-ranging. Enjoy! eric We observed a dubious centennial this year. In 1907, Indiana became the first state in America to pass a eugenics law. Eugenics is the study of the hereditary improvement of the human race by controlled, selective breeding. The word derives from its ponents — eu meaning “well” or “good” and genics meaning...
The Truth about Tithing
In this week’s Acton Commentary I examine “The Truth about Tithing.” “Whatever benefits we claim to receive from tithing, whether spiritual, emotional, or financial, these are not to be the reason that we give. We give out of obedience to God’s word,” I write. Here’s a link to a Marketplace Money report from last Friday that was the proximate occasion for the piece, “Tithing can be a good investment.” It’s a pretty disgustingly caricatured picture of tithing we get from...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved