The Economics Book

(Barry) #1

138


PROTESTANTISM


HAS MADE US


RICH


RELIGION AND THE ECONOMY


T


he German sociologist Max
Weber was interested in
the contrasting levels of
economic success in various
countries during the 16th to 19th
centuries. In The Protestant Ethic
and the Spirit of Capitalism, he
argued that northern Europe and

the US had fared better than the
Catholic societies of South America
and the Mediterranean because of
Protestant beliefs in predestination,
vocation, and the work ethic.
For Catholics divine reckoning
is a future event: one must live a
decent life and perform good deeds

IN CONTEXT


FOCUS
Society and the economy

KEY THINKER
Max Weber (1864 –1920)

BEFORE
1517 Martin Luther publishes
The Ninety-Five Theses,
starting the religious conflict
that leads to the Reformation.

1688 The Glorious Revolution
ends any chance of Catholicism
returning to Britain and paves
the way for the world’s first
Industrial Revolution.

AFTER
1993 Swedish social scientist
Kurt Samuelsson argues that
Puritan leaders did not truly
endorse capitalistic behavior.

2009 Harvard economist
Davide Cantoni publishes
The Case of Protestantism
in 16th Century Germany, in
which he claims to find “no
effects of Protestantism on
economic growth.”

Calvinist Protestantism
claimed only the elect are
predestined for salvation.

The Reformation
made northern Europe
Protestant.

Protestants work harder,
believing it demonstrates
personal salvation.

Hard work and
frugality are outward
manifestations
of the elect.

Protestantism has
made us rich.

They refuse luxuries
and reinvest their profits
into further business...

... growing the economy
and the wealth
of the nation.
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