The Pope just took aim at the global financial system, particularly targeting “ticking time bomb” derivatives, offshore tax havens, and the pursuit of profit at any cost—all which serve to fuel “the inequality so pronounced today.”
The charges are laid out in a document the Vatican released Thursday, which calls for greater regulation “bound by the exigencies of equity and the public benefit.”
The 2008 financial crisis could have sparked efforts to curb “predatory and speculative tendencies” but instead, “the response seems at times like a return to the heights of myopic egoism, limited by an inadequate framework that, excluding the common good, also excludes from its horizons the concern to create and spread wealth, and to eliminate the inequality so pronounced today,” it argues.
“Pope Francis is aware that rampant, unregulated greed in the markets lies at the heart of global economic inequity.”
—Matthew Kent, Public CitizenIn addition, the last several decades have shown “how naive is the belief in a presumed self-sufficiency of the markets” and demonstrated “the compelling necessity of an appropriate regulation that at the same time unites the freedom and protection of every person and operates to create healthy and proper interactions, especially with regards to the more vulnerable.”
“Profit should to be pursued but not ‘at any cost,'” the document goes on to say.
“What is morally unacceptable is not simply to profit, but rather to avail oneself of an inequality for one’s own advantage, in order to create enormous profits that are damaging to others; or to exploit one’s dominant position in order to profit by unjustly disadvantaging others, or to make oneself rich through harming and disrupting the collective common good.”
It also focused on excessive CEO pay, especially when it is not “counterbalanced by equivalent penalization.” Echoing arguments made by Wall Street watchdogs like Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), the document also denounced the current culture that fosters executive wrongdoing because “one often does not hesitate to commit a crime when the foreseen benefits exceed the expected penalty.”
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