Co-Published Books

On Morality, Human Behaviour & Economics


SUGGESTED

Economic Theory
https://iea.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/On-Morality-Vinson-Interactive-Final.pdf
Edited by Professor Juan Castañeda, Director of the Vinson Centre, and Lord Kamall, On Morality, Human Haviour and Economics brings together eleven leading economists, philosophers and theologians to make the moral case for free markets at a moment when consecutive governments have presided over more than a decade of stagnant growth and rising public scepticism of capitalism.

The book is the first volume in the new Vinson Centre Series and emerges from a joint conference between the IEA and the Vinson Centre for the Public Understanding of Economics and Entrepreneurship at the University of Buckingham, held in November 2024.

Drawing on philosophy, theology, economic history, sociology and political science, the contributors argue that classical liberals have allowed their opponents a clear run of the moral terrain. The volume sets out to redress the balance, returning to the foundational arguments of thinkers from Adam Smith and Bernard Mandeville to Friedrich Hayek and reapplying them to contemporary questions of inequality, welfare, business culture, religious ethics and the relationship between markets and the state.

Across twelve chapters, the volume addresses:




  • The Revd Dr Richard Turnbull on why those making the case for the market are failing to do so — and what an intellectual defence of market principles should look like

  • Mikko Arevuo (Cranfield) on Adam Smith’s moral philosophy and his implicit theory of distributive justice

  • Pedro Schwartz (Universidad Camilo José Cela) on Bernard Mandeville, spontaneous order, and the division of labour

  • Elena Leontjeva (Lithuanian Free Market Institute) on capitalism, scarcity and the moral significance of “lack”

  • Benedikt Koehler (IEA) on profit, wealth and private property in Islam, Christianity and Judaism

  • Philip Booth (St Mary’s University) on the economics of Pope Francis, and why his concern for the poor transcends the conventional left–right divide

  • Billy Christmas (West Virginia University) on the economic teachings of the early Church Fathers and private property

  • Paul Dragos Aligica (Mercatus Center) on Hayek’s concept of catallaxy as a solution to the problem of value pluralism

  • Martin Vander Weyer (Business Editor, The Spectator) on why Britain has never truly embraced capitalism, and the lessons of nineteenth-century Manchester and Birmingham

  • Lord Elliott of Mickle Fell (President of the Jobs Foundation) on the practical, theological and historical case for business

  • Dr Chris O’Leary (Manchester Metropolitan University) on a classical liberal vision for a limited welfare state, based on a negative income tax and voluntary mutual aid associations




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