Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Is economics an ideology?
Is economics an ideology?
Jul 17, 2026 9:52 AM

‘Ludwig von Mises’ by Ludwig von Mises Institute CC BY-SA 3.0

Richard H. Spady, research professor of Economics at Johns Hopkins, has recently published a piece at First Things entitled ‘Economics as Ideology’ in which he explores some contemporary trends among economists and their use of economics as a Procrustean bed to reshape society in its own image,

A body of thought is “ideological” when it will­fully projects its own first principles on its subject matter and actively seeks, perhaps unconsciously, material changes to bring social realities into conformity with these first principles.

It is a thoughtful essay and chronicles some worrying trends within the both the discipline of economics and in society at large. I’ve defended economists before (See ‘Misreading capitalism’) but they are not above reproach. For economics to be a force for human flourishing it must be grounded in the liberal tradition from which the discipline itself emerged.

Lord Acton famously said that liberty is the delicate fruit of a mature civilization. His life’s ambition was to write a history of the growth and maturation of the idea of freedom (See my introduction to Lord Acton: Historical and Moral Essays for an outline of the triumphs and tribulations of this massive project). Acton sought to trace the development of the idea because,

The history of institutions is often a history of deception and illusions; for their virtue depends on the ideas that produce and on the spirit that preserves them, and the form may remain unaltered when the substance has passed away.

Churches, states, and all the institutions that constitute our social life which have sought to embrace human freedom have done so unevenly and haphazardly so it is not surprising that the economics profession has done so as well. Peter Boettke is engaged in a project similar to Acton’s seeking to trace the idea of economics through history separating what he calls the ‘mainline’ economic tradition which endures and grows from the ‘mainstream’ economic practice which is whatever economists happen to be doing at the moment (See Living Economics). When the science fiction author Theodore Sturgeon grew frustrated of defending his often maligned genre he responded by coining Sturgeon’s Law acknowledging what everyone knows by experience, that ninety percent of everything is terrible. That shouldn’t prevent us from treasuring and learning from the wondrous ten percent.

That wondrous ten percent of economics emerged from a long liberal tradition. Lord Acton traced this tradition through the world of antiquity in ancient Israel, Greece, and Rome (See History of Freedom in Antiquity) and the later medieval Christian synthesis and elaboration of this tradition (See History of Freedom in Christianity). Acton reminds us that it is the savior himself that introduces the idea of rendering to Caesar the things which are Caesar’s and to God the things which are God’s (Matt. 22:21). Theologians began to examine the nature of exchange (See Sources in Early Modern Economics, Ethics, and Law) and attitudes toward exchange began to change in the wake of this sustained reflection. The origin of the discipline of economics itself is often credited to a professor of moral philosophy, Adam Smith.

The advances in political and economic freedom realized with our imperfect embodiment of the liberal tradition are real but they do not alone constitute the good life (See ‘Give socialism a try? Let’s not.’). In his book Liberalism Ludwig von Mises rightly articulates the limits of economics and social policy,

Social policy, with the means that are at its disposal, can make men rich or poor, but it can never succeed in making them happy or in satisfying their inmost yearnings. Here all external expedients fail. All that social policy can do is to remove the outer causes of pain and suffering; it can further a system that feeds the hungry, clothes the naked, and houses the homeless.

All of life is economic, but economics is not all of life. To put our trust in economists is as mistaken as putting our trust in princes, “Man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God.” (Matt. 4:4)

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
Pro-democracy activist Jimmy Lai charged with another violation of Hong Kong’s repressive NSL
Newspaper publisher Lai and six colleagues were charged with printing, publishing, and selling “seditious publications,” this after being convicted on a variety of charges for their anti-Beijing, pro-freedom activities. Read More… Prominent Hong Kong media mogul and pro-democracy advocate Jimmy Lai, along with six of his former staff members, were charged by prosecutors with an additional National Security Law (NSL) violation, this time regarding “seditious publications,” as part of their ongoing trial. Seventy-four-year-old Lai has already been convicted under the...
Spider-Man: No Way Home offers a multiverse of redemption instead of revenge
Needless to say, spoiler alerts galore! Read More… In superhero movies, it’s a given that the good guys will try to save innocents from the bad guys. Sometimes they save individuals, sometimes they save cities, and all too often—especially in the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU)—they save the entire planet or, increasingly, the entire universe. (Once you’ve raised the stakes so high and swatted them back down, every subsequent threat on that scale seems less threatening because more unreal.) But what...
As SCOTUS mulls Maine religious discrimination case, anxious parents wait across the U.S.
The arguments in Carson v. Malkin have been heard but no decision has yet been made. Will families in Maine receive equal access to funding for private religious schools? Will the religious use/status distinction be abolished? Or will the ghost of James G. Blaine raise its eerie head? Read More… Earlier this month the U.S. Supreme Court heard oral arguments in the case of Carson v. Makin. The appellants in this case, co-represented by the Institute for Justice and my...
This billionaire from Hong Kong is standing up to China’s oppression behind bars
Jimmy Lai remains strongly rooted: first in his fervent Catholic faith, and second in his unshakable support of freedom. Read More… Hong Kong was once a beacon of opportunity, of democracy. It was a political refuge, a blip in a territory controlled munist China. Seemingly overnight, 7.5 million Hong Kongers have had their freedoms stripped from them by an oppressive Chinese regime intentsilencing any voice of dissent — and that doesn’t mean revoking the odd Twitter account. It means imprisonment...
Today is Lord Acton’s 188th birthday. His philosophy should guide our next two centuries
Acton’s vision is the liberal vision, a vision of a society that is beyond the state. It sees individual souls above the state and that God rules it all through his providence. Acton’s vision is still worth defending and offers hope to us now in thesepolarizedand troubled times. Read More… Today, January 10, 2022, is Lord Acton’s 188th birthday. This difficult era ofa global pandemic,a crisis in institutions, andcivil unrestseems a strange time to look back on the life and...
Remembering Latin America’s knight of freedom
A signal force in bringing market economics and limited government ideas to Latin America, Ramón P. Díaz’s legacy offers hope for a continent sinking into a mire of socialism and authoritarianism. Read More… January 7, 2022, marks the fifth anniversary of the death of a man who played a major role in spreading throughout Latin America the key ideas that underpin the free society. Intellectual, lawyer, journalist, economist, university professor, and public servant, Ramón P. Díaz (1926–2017) has good claim...
Jimmy Lai ranked No. 1 on press freedom coalition’s “10 Most Urgent” list
Imprisoned entrepreneur, publisher, and pro-democracy activist Jimmy Lai has been highlighted as the most urgent case when es to threats to press freedom in China, this as the world is about to focus on Beijing for the 2022 Winter Olympics. Read More… Every month, the One Free Press Coalition issues its “10 Most Urgent” list, ranking the most harrowing challenges to press freedom from around the world in order of urgency. Jimmy Lai, a 74-year-old Hong Kong entrepreneur and pro-democracy...
North Korea’s economic and cultural reversals mark Kim Jong-un’s 10th anniversary
COVID and failures at international summits have caused Pyongyang to reverse economic reforms and openness to South Koran pop culture. The future is beginning to look a lot like his father’s past. Read More… Communism has spawned only one full-scale monarchy: the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea. On December 17, 2011, 70-year-old Dear Leader Kim Jong-il died. That very same day, Kim’s 27-year-old son, Kim Jong-un, was put forth as the “Great Successor” and surrounded by elderly “mentors” who were...
Resolve this New Year to visit Billy Wilder’s The Apartment
The Big City can be a great place to lose yourself among a crowd, and too often lose your soul. Only love of another can help you find yourself again. Read More… Christmas movies tend to be sentimental, to emphasize the struggles that define our society and our souls, but ultimately they are hopeful and even joyful. Humanity triumphs at the end of the story—for evidence, read my series of essays on The Bishop’s Wife, The Shop Around the Corner,...
Elizabeth Holmes is the con artist we were all waiting for
Her promise of a magical technology that would transform healthcare proved a lie, but why were so many smart, plished investors willing to believe it? Read More… Elizabeth Holmes has been found guilty on four of 11 federal charges of wire fraud and conspiracy, after promising revolutionary blood test technology from her corporation, Theranos. The promised disruption was something people desperately wanted and still want: cheap, quick blood tests, requiring only a finger drop of blood. In reality, the corporation...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved