A Decade after Economic Justice for
All:
Continuing Principles, Changing Context,
New Challenges
A Pastoral Message of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops
on the tenth Anniversary of the Economic Pastoral November, 1995
"The challenge of this pastoral letter is not merely to think
differently, but also to act differently. A renewal of economic life
depends on the conscious choices and commitments of individual believers
who practice their faith in the world. This letter calls us to
conversion and common action, to new forms of stewardship, service, and
citizenship. The completion of a letter such as this is but the
beginning of a long process of education, discussion, and action. "
Introduction
Almost ten ago our Bishops' Conference adopted the Pastoral Letter
Economic Justice for All. This letter was an effort to proclaim the
Gospel of Jesus Christ in the midst of our complex and powerful economy.
Our pastoral letter insisted that the measure of our economy is not only
what it produces, but also how it touches human life, whether it
protects or undermines the dignity of the human person, and how it
promotes the common good. We emphasized that economic decisions have
human consequences and moral content; they help or hurt people,
strengthen or weaken family life, advance or diminish the quality of
justice in our land. Our letter was not an economic blueprint, but a
moral challenge and a call to action. We called for a "New American
Experiment" of participation and collaboration for the common good that
has yet to be really tried in our land.
Ten years after Economic Justice for All, the nations needs to hear its
message once again and respond to its continuing challenges. At a time
of great national debate, the Catholic community must continue to speak
for poor children and working families. Our nation must reduce its
deficits, reform welfare, reshape its foreign assistance and reorder
national priorities. However, the fundamental moral measure of these
policy choices is how they touch the poor in our midst, especially
children and families who struggle against economic, social and moral
pressures which leave them poor and powerless.
Poor children, workers and families may not have the most powerful
lobbies, but they have the greatest needs. We welcome a broad debate on
economic life, but we cannot support a retreat in the fight against
poverty and economic injustice.
Therefore, at this time of national choices, we ask the Catholic
community's help in assessing how far we have come and where we need to
go to realize the promise of our nation and to be faithful to our
Catholic teaching on economic life. Much has changed in this decade --
in our economy and our world, our churches and our communities. But much
remains the same -- there is still too much poverty and not enough
economic opportunity for all our people.
In this anniversary message, we renew our call to greater economic
justice in an economy with remarkable strength and creativity, but with
too little economic growth distributed too inequitably. The power and
productivity of the U.S. economy sometimes seems to be leading to three
nations living side by side:
- One is prospering and producing in a new information age, coping
well with new economic challenges.
- A second is squeezed by declining real incomes and global
economic competition. They wonder whether they will keep their jobs
and health insurance, whether they can afford college education or
Catholic schools for their children.
- A third community is growing more discouraged and despairing. Called an American underclass, their children are growing up desperately poor in the richest nation on earth. Their question at the end of the month is whether they can afford the rent or groceries or heat.
As people of faith, we believe we are one family, not competing
classes. We are sisters and brothers, not economic units or statistics.
We must come together around the values of our faith to shape economic
policies that protect human life, promote strong families, expand a
stable middle class, create decent jobs, and reduce the level of poverty
and need in our society. We need to strengthen our sense of community
and our pursuit of the common good. A decade after the pastoral, it
remains clear that the moral test of our society is how the poor, the
weak and the vulnerable are faring. And by this standard we are falling
far short.
We believe the best way to prepare for this anniversary is not to
develop a major new document, but to offer a urgent call to renewed
Catholic dialogue and action in pursuit of a more just, productive and
human economy. As we mark this anniversary, we ask the Catholic
community in its ongoing activities to:
- look back at the economic letter and its major themes;
- look around at the U.S. economy a decade later, noting progress and continuing problems;
- look ahead at future challenges in light of our developing Catholic teaching.
A Look Back
The economic pastoral was an enormous undertaking. Years in preparation,
it generated wide discussion, occasional controversy and much activity.
But it produced remarkable consensus and unity -- all but nine bishops
voted for the final letter. The process of consultation, listening and
dialogue strengthened the letter and enriched the Church. In parishes,
schools, universities, think tanks and a wide variety of ad hoc efforts,
the Church's teaching was shared and discussed and its implications
debated. In the years after the pastoral, nine of every ten dioceses
conducted education sessions in parishes; 60% strengthened legislative
advocacy; more than half held sessions with businesses, labor or farm
representatives and a majority assessed their personnel policies.
While much of the news coverage focused on policy directions, the heart
of the letter remains its scriptural roots and Catholic principles. The
greatest contribution of our economic pastoral was to remind us that the
pursuit of economic justice is a work of faith and an imperative of the
Gospel. For some Catholics this message was an affirmation of long-held
principle. For others, it was a jarring exposure to part of the Catholic
tradition they had never encountered. The call to economic justice is
not a political preference or ideological choice, but a response to the
Scriptures and a requirement of Catholic teaching.
We hope this anniversary period will be a time of increased focus on
economic justice in our parishes, institutions, families and society. A
brief resolution cannot communicate the full substance of the letter,
but its central message might be summarized in this way:
- The economy exists to serve the human person, not the other way
around.
- Economic life should be shaped by moral principles and ethical
norms.
- Economic choices should be measured by whether they enhance or
threaten human life, human dignity and human rights.
- A fundamental concern must be support for the family and the
well-being of children.
- The moral measure of any economy is how the weakest are faring. -
In the last decade, the Church has continued to share and apply its
social doctrine. Pope John Paul III continues to be a powerful voice for
solidarity and justice in a world often lacking both. His defense of the
poor, workers, family life, and the victims of injustice is a constant
theme of his travels and teaching. In his 1991 encyclical, Centesimus
Annus, our Holy Father offered a sweeping moral analysis of the economic
and global challenges of our times, reaffirming the principles of our
tradition and developing new themes. This encyclical offers particular
challenges for U.S. Catholics. While it recognizes the vital
contributions of democratic values and market economics, it insists that
these be guided by the common good and be at the service of human
dignity and human rights. He reviewed the failed and empty promises of
communism, as he warned against a capitalism which neglects the human
and moral dimensions of economic life. The Catechism of the Catholic
Church reaffirms the Church's teaching that economic life must be
directed to the service of persons and be subject to the limits of the
moral order and the demands of social justice.
Our own Conference has sought to apply Catholic principles in a variety
of statements and initiatives which build on our economic pastoral. Our
reflections on children and families, environmental justice,
international responsibility, stewardship, welfare, health care and
violence in our land offer examples of our commitment to continuing
education and advocacy on issues of economic justice.
Our economic pastoral and the broader Catholic social teaching which
shaped it are complex and nuanced. They do not lend themselves to simple
ideological identification. Some in our own community welcome the
tradition's teaching on private property, the limits of the state, the
advantages of free markets and the condemnation of communism, but resist
the focus on the poor, the defense of labor unions, the recognition of
the-moral limits of markets and the responsibilities of government.
Others welcome the teaching on the "option for the poor," the duties of
government to protect the weak, the warnings against unbridled
capitalism, but seem to ignore the centrality of family, the emphasis on
economic initiative, and the warnings against the bureaucratic excesses
of a "social assistance" state. Our social tradition is a moral
framework, not a partisan platform or ideological tool. It challenges
both right and left, labor and management to focus on the dignity of the
human person and the common good rather than their own political or
economic interests.
In the words of Centesimus Annus, we promote "a society of free work, of
enterprise and of participation. Such a society is not directed against
the market but demands that the market be appropriately controlled by
the forces of society and by the State, so as to guarantee that the
basic needs of the whole of society are satisfied."
A Look Around
In this brief message, we do not offer an overall assessment of our
economy, but we need to acknowledge that some things have changed and
some have not. As reported in the Statistical Abstract of the United
States:
Americans living in poverty have increased from 33 million to almost 37
million, even though our economy has been growing in recent years.
Economic forces, family disintegration and government action and
inaction have combined to leave more than a fifth of our children
growing up poor in one of the richest nations on earth.
Joblessness, hunger and homelessness still haunt our nation. Millions of
people are actively looking for work and cannot find it. Over the past
ten years there has been a sharp increase in the percentage of people
who work full-time but cannot lift their family out of poverty. At
present this represents 18% of all workers.
The poor and the middle class face growing economic insecurity. Wages
are stagnating despite recent gains in productivity, and companies
seeking to cut costs are turning to part-time and temporary workers,
often at the expense of family income.
In the past ten years, some 234,000 family farms have been lost, and the
overall poverty rate for farmers continues to hover around 20 percent.
Some rural towns are disappearing, and agricultural land and food
processing have become increasingly concentrated in fewer and fewer
hands.
Discrimination, lack of jobs, poor education and other factors have left
African Americans and Hispanics far more likely to be jobless and poor.
Forty-four percent of African American children and 36% of Hispanic
children are growing up poor.
Over the past 15 years, the gap between rich and poor in America has
grown wider. In 1993, it is reported the highest earning 20% of
households saw their income increase by about $10,000. In contrast, the
20% of households at the bottom of the income range saw their income
decrease by $1,200. At a time of modest economic growth, many families
are experiencing declining real wages.
Family and social factors continue to contribute to poverty and economic
stress. It is reported that a child born to a mother who is married,
with a high school diploma, whose husband works or has a job herself has
an 8% chance of growing up in poverty. A child born to a mother who is
not married, without a high school education and without a job in the
family has an 80% chance of growing up in poverty. Clearly, the
disintegration of families, the absence of fathers, high divorce rates,
the failures of education and the reality of joblessness are crucial
factors in our economic problems. And just as clearly, strong families
contribute to the economic, social and moral health of our nation.
The nation continues to pile up debt, burdening both our economy and our
children. Government deficits, corporate speculation and excessive
consumerism contribute to an ethic of "buy now -- pay later" which
violates principles of stewardship and responsibility. The gross federal
debt has grown from $1.8 trillion in 1985 to $4.7 trillion in 1994.
Economic issues are increasingly global issues with growing foreign
competition, interdependence and trade. In a post-Cold War world, much
has changed, but for many it is still a world of too much poverty and
not enough development. The number of chronically hungry people has
risen from 500 million in 1985 to 800 million now. 1.3 billion people,
many of them children, live in desperate poverty around the world.
Our current economy is marked by considerable paradox. Profits and
productivity grow, while many workers' real income and sense of security
decline. Parents, of even modest means, wonder whether their children
will live as well as they do. Some businesses cut jobs and prosper while
their workers pay the price for downsizing. Government seems to pile up
debt, cut programs and feed public cynicism all at once. At a time of
diminishing government help for poor workers and families, Congressional
spending for new weapons exceeds the Pentagon's request, justified more
by employment needs than defense criteria. We seem a very long way from
"economic justice for all."
There is no consensus on what explains these trends. The decline of
manufacturing jobs, rapid technological change, the globalization of the
economy, the diminished influence of labor and trade unions, the erosion
of the minimum wage, and the costs of health insurance all have
contributed to the declining real family income. A growing income gap is
fed by economic decisions that put profits ahead of people and lead to
inadequate wages, reduced benefits, fewer jobs, and less job security.
Meanwhile, individual choices and immoral behavior that contribute to
increasing out-of-wedlock births, violence, drug use and the changing
family structure are having a significant impact on both families and
the economy. We know poverty and economic injustice results from
discrimination and destructive personal behavior, from unwise decisions
of corporations and the unresponsive behavior of the public sector.
Our Catholic tradition speaks to these concerns. Ten years after
Economic Justice for All, our community's greatest challenge is to
encourage those with economic power to shape their decisions by how they
affect the stability of families and the opportunities of people who are
poor, while at the same time calling on all individuals to make personal
choices that strengthen their families and contribute to the common
good.
A Look Ahead: Questions for the Future
As we observe this anniversary, we wish to encourage lively dialogue and
principled action on a wide variety of issues and concerns, including:
- How can our nation work together to overcome the scandal of so
much poverty in our midst, especially among our children?
- How can our Church take a leadership role in calling those in
positions of power to promote economic growth, job security, decent
wages, and greater opportunities?
- How can our community shape the priorities of our culture to
promote greater personal responsibility and better economic choices?
- What are the moral responsibilities and limitations of markets,
the state and the voluntary sector? How can business, labor, various
levels of government and mediating structures like churches,
charities and voluntary groups work together to overcome economic
injustice and
exploitation in our communities?
- How can the dignity and rights of workers be protected and
enhanced in an economy where increasing competition, frequent
downsizing and less unionization have left many workers at
risk?
- How can U.S. workers and enterprises survive and thrive in a
world where other nations compete by offering their workers
subsistence wages and minimal benefits?
- How can our nation's economic power in the world be used to
build a more just global economy? How can trade and development
policies offer hope to a still hungry and suffering world?
- How can we address the enormous economic pressures which
undermine families and the family factors (e.g., absent fathers,
teenage mothers, high rates of divorce) which leave so many children
poor? How can we support families in their essential moral, social
and economic roles?
- How can our society make concern for the "least among us" and
the common good the central consideration in the development of
budget, environmental and other national policies?
- How can we assess our own work ethic, productivity, consumption
and lifestyles in light of the needs of a hungry world?
- How can the nation address the diverse social and economic
forces which leave both inner- city and rural communities as places
of disproportionate poverty and discouragement?
- How can we address the racial discord that exists in our nation
today? How can we overcome the growing racial and ethnic distance
between different communities and the continuing impact of
discrimination in economic life?
- How can the Church practice in its own life and institutions what it preaches to others about economic justice, human dignity and the rights of workers?
There are many more questions that could be raised, but these are
examples of issues where Catholics can apply the Church's teaching,
share our experience and voice our hopes in civil dialogue and
principled action on economic justice. In addressing these and other
questions, we believe the Catholic community can be a bridge-builder in
several ways. Our community crosses lines of class and race, politics
and ideology. Catholics are at the center and fringes of U.S. economic
life. We are CEO's and Senators, union leaders- and small business
owners, n-migrant farm workers and homeless children. Ten years after
the pastoral, we need to help our Church renew its sense of solidarity
and our society rediscover a sense of national community, pursuing the
common good rather than our own narrow economic and other interests.
In addition, our tradition emphasizes both rights and responsibilities,
promotes increased charity and insists on greater justice, advocates
greater personal responsibility and broader social responsibility. We
recognize the vital roles and limits of markets, government and
voluntary groups. We hope in this anniversary year we can get beyond
some of the false choices and ideological polarization in the economic
debate and join in a renewed search for the common good.
We can be the advocates of a renewed social contract between employers
and employees, between recipients and providers of assistance, between
investors and managers that seeks long term progress over short term
gains, that offers respect and security in exchange for responsibility
and hard work, and that protects the vulnerable, especially our
children.
A Call to Renewed Commitment
We hope that this anniversary period can be a time of prayer and
reflection, discussion and dialogue, advocacy and action. Economic
justice begins in our homes and families, in our individual choices and
household priorities. Unless we teach our children basic values of
honesty, compassion and initiative they will not be equipped to deal
with the "counter values" of selfishness, consumerism and materialism so
prevalent in our society.
We urge Catholic publications to re-focus on economic issues and their
moral and human implications. We urge Catholic educational institutions
to redouble their efforts to share our teaching, to help their students
develop concern for the poor and for justice, and to contribute to the
common good by their research and educational activities. We urge
national and diocesan organizations to integrate themes of economic
justice in their ongoing convenings, publications, advocacy and other
activities. And most especially, we encourage Catholic parishes to
continue to weave our teaching on economic life into their prayer and
preaching, their education and formation, their outreach and advocacy.
We do not ask Catholic communities to set aside their ongoing ministry
to focus on economic justice. Rather, we ask leaders to further
integrate these principles and tasks into the worship, formation and
service they offer on a daily basis. The pursuit of economic justice is
not an option or add-on for Catholics; it is part of who we are and what
we believe.
The Catholic community will continue to carry out the message of the
pastoral in many different ways -- in the service and advocacy of
Catholic Charities, the relief and development efforts of Catholic
Relief Services, the empowerment and education of the Campaign for Human
Development, to cite a few. Through our own National Conference, our
State and Diocesan structures, the Catholic community is called to
continue to educate and advocate for children and families on issues
ranging from real welfare reform to school choice, from the rights of
workers to sustainable development. We need to strengthen and build on
these and other impressive efforts.
However, it has always been clear that the pursuit of greater economic
justice is not carried out primarily by the statements of religious
bodies, but in the broader marketplace -- where investments are made,
contracts are negotiated, products are created, workers are hired and
policies are set. The search for economic justice is also carried
forward in the public square. In this election year, while others are
campaigning for office, let us campaign for the poor and vulnerable and
for greater economic justice. Let us ask those who seek to lead and
represent us how they will govern and vote on key issues of human life,
human dignity and economic justice. And let us as citizens and believers
continue to advocate for people who are poor and vulnerable in our
communities, nation and world.
We renew our pastoral's call for believers to shape their choices in the
marketplace and public arena according to the values of the Scriptures
and the moral principles of the Catholic Church. Whatever our economic
status, political identification or ideological preferences, we are
called as Catholics to work for an economy more respectful of human life
and human dignity. In our work and citizenship, our economic, political
and personal choices we must reach out to "the least of these" and seek
the common good.
We may differ on specifics and priorities, but let us come together --
across economic, ideological and ethnic lines -- to work for a society
and economy offering more justice and opportunity, especially for the
poor. Differences over how to move forward will give rise to legitimate
debate, but indifference to the need to build a more just and open
economy is not an option for Catholics. Every Christian is called to
follow Jesus in his mission -- and ours -- of bringing "good news to the
poor, new sight to the blind, liberty to captives and to set the
downtrodden free." That was the call of our pastoral letter almost ten
years ago and still is our task today.
