Sometimes
you don’t have to say anything “new” to make news. Consider the “apostolic
exhortation” the Vatican recently released.
This
statement from Pope Francis, observers note,
didn’t really break new theological ground. But the Pope’s exhortation,
his first since he stepped onto the world stage, still made front page news the
world over — and fully deserved that attention.
What makes
this new papal statement so significant? No global religious figure has ever
before denounced economic inequality with an assault as wide-ranging — and
accessible.
Just what insights can we take from what Pope Francis has to say about inequality? These five jump out.
First,
inequality has no redeeming social value.
Apologists
for inequality like to argue that grand private concentrations of wealth serve
as an incentive for the rest of us and supply the investments that keep
economies thriving.
Pope
Francis, in clear language that demonstrates his command of the vernacular,
blows away these claims.
“Some
people continue to defend trickle-down theories which assume that economic
growth, encouraged by a free market, will inevitably succeed in bringing about
greater justice and inclusiveness in the world,” Francis writes.
This
rich-people-friendly take on the world, he points out, “has never been
confirmed by the facts.”
Second,
markets demand our critical attention.
Any
serious attempt to undo the inequality that markets engender, our world’s deep
pockets insist, risks upsetting the natural order that markets in their
inherent wisdom create.
But,
in real life, markets follow rules. And these rules reflect the economic power
of those who set them, not any deeper wisdom or divine providence. Pope Francis
sees no reason to automatically accept the verdicts that markets deliver. He
sees every reason to examine how markets actually operate — and to challenge
those operations that leave us staggeringly unequal.
We
need to reject “the absolute autonomy of markets” and confront “the structural
causes of inequality,” he writes. Until we take these essential steps, “no
solution will be found for the world’s problems.”
Third,
wealth works best when we share it.
A
previous world-famous Francis — the English philosopher Sir Francis Bacon —
advised us centuries ago that wealth, like manure, only does good when we
spread it around.
Pope
Francis agrees. His exhortation encourages those who sit at our economic
summits “to ponder” the teachings of the ancient sage who told us that “not to
share one’s wealth with the poor is to steal from them.” We must, he advises,
“say ‘thou shalt not’ to an economy of exclusion and inequality.”
Adds
the Pope: “Such an economy kills.”
Fourth,
inequality endangers us all, not just the poor.
In an
era where “the thirst for power and possessions knows no limits,” the Pope
reminds us, anything that “stands in the way of increased profits” — “like the
environment” — stands “defenseless before the interests of a deified market.”
The
security we all seek in our daily lives, Pope Francis notes, will remain
unattainable so long as we remain perilously unequal. No “law enforcement or
surveillance systems can indefinitely guarantee tranquility,” he writes, until
we reverse “exclusion and inequality.”
“Just
as goodness tends to spread,” he explains, “the toleration of evil, which is
injustice, tends to expand its baneful influence and quietly to undermine any
political and social system.”
Fifth,
social fabrics always tear in unequal societies.
In
relatively equal societies, where most people can afford the same things,
material things in general tend not to matter that much. But in unequal
societies, everything reverses. Things — and the money to buy them — become
primary.
“The
worship of the ancient golden calf,” observes Pope Francis, “has returned in a
new and ruthless guise.”
Sums
up the Pope: “The culture of prosperity deadens us; we are thrilled if the
market offers us something new to purchase; and in the meantime all those lives
stunted for lack of opportunity seem a mere spectacle; they fail to move us.”
And
Pope Francis clearly wants us moving. Against inequality.
OtherWords columnist
Sam Pizzigati, an Institute for Policy Studies associate fellow, edits the
inequality weekly Too Much. His latest book is The Rich Don’t Always Win: The Forgotten Triumph over
Plutocracy that Created the American Middle Class. OtherWords.org