Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Deirdre McCloskey’s case for ‘humane libertarianism’
Deirdre McCloskey’s case for ‘humane libertarianism’
Nov 3, 2025 2:16 AM

In Deirdre McCloskey’s latest book, Bourgeois Equality: How Ideas, Not Capital or Institutions, Enriched the World, she adds a hearty layer to her ongoing thesis about the sources of our newfound prosperity. In an age where Left and Right seem intent on focusing merely on the material means and ends, McCloskey reminds us of the underlying forces at play, arguing that such prosperity is not due to systems, tools, or materials, but to the ideas, virtues, and rhetoric behind them.

“The bettering ideas arose in northwestern Europe from a novel liberty and dignity that was slowly extended to moners…among them the bourgeoisie,” she writes. “The new liberty and dignity resulted in a startling revaluation by the society as a whole of the trading and betterment in which the bourgeoisie specialized.”

In a new manifesto for what she calls a “new American liberalism” (or a “humane libertarianism”), McCloskey recently channeled those same ideas into a more focused challenge to classical liberals, reminding us that defending the poor and downtrodden requires the same intentional balance in imagination: focusing less on the surface-level, material dynamics and instead remembering Adam Smith’s “liberal plan of equality, liberty, and justice.” “Such a humane liberalism has for two centuries worked on the whole astonishingly well,” she writes. “…In the eighteenth century kings had rights and women had none. Now it’s the other way around.”

After an extensive re-iteration of those basic foundations and their fruits, McCloskey gets deeper into the actual application, pointing to a somewhat predictable list of libertarian and conservative policy priorities, ranging from reversals in taxation and corporatism to the privatization of different areas and industries to expansions in immigration to widespread localization (driven by “the notion of Catholic social teaching of ‘subsidiarity’”). “The practical proposals are legion,” she says, “because illiberal policies are by now legion, as they also were during the feudalism that the early liberals overturned.” For McCloskey, the “essence of real, humane liberalism, in short, is a small government, honest and effective in its modest realm,” leaving people to “pursue their non-violent projects voluntarily, laissez faire, laissez passer.”

Yet McCloskey routinely qualifies these ideas with pointed reminders to a certain strain of “misled libertarians.” For many in the classical-liberal camp, McCloskey observes, those philosophical, non-material priorities are often used as a mere excuse to shrug at whatever “external” moral or material obligations may, in fact, exist. For this sort of “non-political” libertarianism (or as some might say, libertinism), McCloskey has little patience. “But do not ignore other people, or disdain them, or refuse to help them, issuing a country-club declaration of ‘I’ve got mine,’” she writes. “Humane liberalism is not atomistic and selfish, contrary to what the High Liberals [i.e. progressives] believe about it—and as some misled libertarians in fact talk in their boyish ways as if they believed about it, too. It is on the contrary an economy and polity and society of equal dignity.”

Indeed, amidst her profound elaborations on the foundations of human liberty, McCloskey is attentive to remind us of the why behind the what and the how, stretching us beyond the garden varieties of narrow, selfish individualism that increasingly dominate all sides of our cultural and political debates.

This manifests most clearly in McCloskey’s assessment of a humane liberal’s approach to government. McCloskey is not an anarchist, and uses a specific example to demonstrate how her stated approach of “humane liberalism” might practically intersect with the goals of good governance, blurry and imperfect though it may turn out to be:

Helping people in a crisis, surely, or raising them up from some grave disadvantage, such as social or physical or mental handicap, by giving help in the form of money to be spent in unprotected markets, is a just role for the government, and is still more justly admirable for individuals doing it voluntarily. Give the poor in Orleans parish the vouchers for private schools. Give money to the very poor of Chicago to rent a home privately. Turn over your book royalties from Capitalism in the Twenty-First Century to an effective charity.

Yet do not, ever, supply schooling or housing directly from the government, because governmental ownership of the means of production, a literal socialism, is regularly a bad way to produce anything but national defense (and that’s pretty bad itself), and anyway makes the poor into serfs of the government, or of its good friends the teachers’ union in the public schools and the bureaucrats in the public housing authority. The Swedes, whom Americans think are socialists, gave up their state monopoly of local pharmacies, which any Swede can tell you were maddeningly arrogant and inefficient.

For the humane liberal, government has a role, but a significant part of that role is recognizing and respecting the fruits of human liberty, maintaining the right amount of room for human initiative munity institutions to flourish as they will. Once again, such an approach has less to do with the actual dollar amounts of government transactions or the material equilibrium of the day than it does with a particular policy’s prospects for relational, institutional, and moral chaos.

For libertarians and conservatives alike, the essay offers much to consider, and for Christians, the opportunities for reflection are more than a bit pressing. In Bourgeois Equality, McCloskey proclaims with confidence that “enrichment leads to enrichment, not loss of one’s own soul,” and that “one would hope that the Great Enrichment would be used for higher purposes.” Those “higher purposes,” are part of the same fabric she points to in this latest essay, absorbing the space between individual and state, and however optimistic we may be toward their achievement, they are not automatic.

No matter the foundations and fruits of particular varieties of political and social and religious liberty, that task falls to us. This new frontier of prosperity – of abundant time and resources and energetic collaboration – can certainly be abused, if neglected. And that’s where we find our entrance, taking those “humane” ideas and mechanisms, always with our neighbor in mind, and always for the higher purposes of a higher liberty.

Image: Public Domain

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
Rev. Ben Johnson: The socialist bizarro world of David Bentley Hart
When e across a think piece so catastrophically wrong as David Bentley Hart’s April 27 New York Times column, “Can We Please Relax About ‘Socialism’?” you marvel at the effort, intentional or not. Hart, an Eastern Orthodox theologian and, as the Times puts it a “cultural critic,” says he knows that, “in this country we employ terms like ‘socialism’ with wanton indifference to historical details and conceptual distinctions.” He’s right, but not in the way he thinks he’s right. After...
Acton Line podcast: The moral hazard of student debt; Unraveling Islam
On this episode of Acton Line, Caroline Roberts speaks with Andrew Kloster, deputy director of the Center for the Study of the Administrative State at George Mason University, about the student debt crisis. Kloster claims that the student debt crisis is the greatest moral hazard of our Nation and explains how he sees the crisis panning out in the future. On the second segment, Acton’s director of research, Samuel Gregg, sits down with Mustafa Akyol, senior research fellow at the...
America doesn’t have a radically capitalist economy
Socialism, it seems, is back. But maybe the real question we should be asking is how far the United States has embraced various features of what might be called social democracy over the past 100 years. This is one of the points underscored in a well-written paper by the Heritage Foundation’s David Burton, entitled “Comparing Free Enterprise with Socialism” (April 30, 2019). Among other things, Burton also manages to: • bring clarity to the free markets versus socialism debate by...
Religious toleration in a religious state
The concepts of toleration espoused by theologians in the officially religious states of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries deserve closer examination. So argue Tobias Dienst and Christoph Strohm in their introduction to Martinus Becanus’s 1607 treatise, On the Duty to Keep Faith with Heretics. Becanus (1563–1624), a Dutch Jesuit theologian who became court confessor to the Holy Roman Emperor, lived in and supported an officially Roman Catholic state, but this did not prevent him from developing a concept of religious...
Thanos the revolutionary
After the second weekend of release, the directors of Avengers: Endgame have declared that spoilers are fair game, and so it is time to pick up where some previous reflections left off and explore the villain Thanos’ development from Infinity War to Endgame. As I explored earlier, Thanos’ vision in Infinity War is neo-Malthusian: “His dogmatic adherence to the neo-Malthusian creed of limitation and extinction requires him to make a sacrifice, first of his own child and then of half...
May 1st is no day to worship work
On May 1st, the feast of St. Joseph the Worker, a Catholic church named after the saintly carpenter and foster father to Jesus, tragically burned to the ground in Phoenix, Arizona. On the very same May 1st in Europe it was a state holiday. It was International Workers’ Day, also known as Labor Day, when the workforce traditionally enjoys a day of ‘non-work’. As Europeans picnicked and leisured, in the dark Arizona desert hell broke loose in the form of...
Presidential candidate Kamala Harris: We need to ban right-to-work laws
Speaking at a recent a Service Employees International Union (SEIU) event, Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris said there there is a need for “banning right-to-work laws.” It’s unclear how Harris plans to do this from the federal level, as Right to Work laws are state laws that guarantee a person cannot pelled to join or pay dues to a labor union as a condition of employment. “Kamala Harris wants to make absolutely sure that we know she’s an authoritarian,” says...
Half of millennials would prefer to live in a socialist or communist country
Yesterday was May Day, a date which some people—mostly socialists munists—consider to be an observance of International Workers’ Day. Others believe instead of celebrating labor the day should be considered an international observance of Victims of Communism Day. Law professor Ilya Somin explains why we should use the day memorate the victims munist totalitarian tyranny: While the influence munist ideology has declined since its mid-twentieth century peak, it is far from dead. Largely munist regimes remain in power in Cuba...
The dangers of Catholic anti-liberalism
Korey D. Maas, associate professor of history at Hillsdale College, has written a timely warning to American Catholics at Public Discourse titled, ‘The Coming Anti-Catholicism.’ Maas begins his essay with a recounting of the early history of American anti-Catholicism, its mitigation in the 1960s, and its troubling resurgence in recent years: bined effects of Camelot and the Council were to make political anti-Catholicism gauche almost overnight. Nobody, therefore, is surprised today when conservative Catholics and liberal non-Catholics alike respond to...
Unemployment as economic-spiritual indicator — April 2019 report
Series Note: Jobs are one of the most important aspects of a morally functioning economy. They help us serve the needs of our neighbors and lead to human flourishing both for the individual and munities. Conversely, not having a job can adversely affect spiritual and psychological well-being of individuals and families. Because unemployment is a spiritual problem, Christians in America need to understand and be aware of the monthly data on employment. Each month highlight thelatest numberswe need to know...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved