Despite its all‐encompassing title this article aims to offer a number of pointers to a Christian critique of the methodological basis of orthodox (or broadly speaking neoclassical) economics. The contention for which the author aims to offer some justification is that that methodological basis is such that it has historically “loaded” the analytical and predictive “dice” in favour of the capitalist or so‐called free market system. By exploring the way in which economic analysis has evolved into a subject that claims to be “positive” (meaning ethically neutral, or free from subjective valuation), we question both the desirability of such a characteristic, and if indeed orthodox economics has succeeded in achieving it. The nature of this alleged “positivist fallacy” is such that the predictive ability of conventional economic analysis is to be brought severely into doubt and, in the present author's opinion, justifies an approach to economics based on unashamedly normative Biblical principles (as for example attempted by Hay and Kent).
Article navigation
1 October 1987
Review Article|
October 01 1987
Economic Orthodoxy and the Free Market System: A Christian Critique
Andrew Henley
Andrew Henley
University of Kent, Canterbury, UK
Search for other works by this author on:
Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 1758-6712
Print ISSN: 0306-8293
© MCB UP Limited
1987
International Journal of Social Economics (1987) 14 (10): 56–66.
Citation
Henley A (1987), "Economic Orthodoxy and the Free Market System: A Christian Critique". International Journal of Social Economics, Vol. 14 No. 10 pp. 56–66, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/eb014088
Download citation file:
Suggested Reading
The impact of Greek Orthodoxy on entrepreneurship: a theoretical framework
Journal of Enterprising Communities: People and Places in the Global Economy (May,2009)
Development of religious tourism: perceptions of Christian Orthodoxy ecclesiastical communities and leaders
Tourism Review (September,2025)
Vladimir Soloviev: Prophet of Modernity
International Journal of Social Economics (May,1993)
The autonomy of economics from Judeo‐Christian thought: a critique
International Journal of Social Economics (September,2003)
What will be the next records management orthodoxy?
Records Management Journal (November,2010)
Related Chapters
Christianity: Orthodoxy and Catholicism
Religious Diversity and Children's Literature: Strategies and Resources
Sleeping Giant Awake!: Why Restoring Creation and New Creation to the Gospel Can Reform the World Through Our Students
Embracing Diversity: Formative Christian Higher Education and the Challenge of Pluralisms
Evangelical Identity in a Secular Age: The Use of the Bible in the Rhetoric of Crisis
Identifying as Christian in an Alien Public Arena
Recommended for you
These recommendations are informed by your reading behaviors and indicated interests.
