1st Edition

The Economic Thought of Hilaire Belloc A Christian Alternative to the Servile State

By Alfonso Díaz Vera Copyright 2024
    158 Pages 6 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    Hilaire Belloc’s thinking on the economy constitutes, by its originality and acuity, a heterodox approach of the greatest interest in addressing the economic problems of his time and those of our own.

    Belloc’s main interest as a writer were on economics and history, and his works were praised by economists such as F. A. Hayek or Wilhelm Röpke and political philosophers such as Robert Nisbet and Russell Kirk, but his contributions have been often overlooked. To address that oversight, this book inserts Belloc´s ideas into the academic dialogue on economics. Despite not being a trained economist, Belloc developed his thought based on a coherent system rooted in original elements such as the scholastic tradition. Belloc’s Christian or “post-scholastic” economics updates and renews many of the scholastic concepts to make them applicable to the economy of the world he knew. Issues such as the impossibility of socialism, entrepreneurship, the effects of monetary policy and credit on economic cycles, or the sustainability of the welfare state were studied by Belloc from a very singular perspective.

    Describing and interpreting the economic thought of Belloc, the book will be of interest to scholars and students, as well as general readers, interested in heterodox perspectives on economics.

    Introduction  1. Hilaire Belloc: A spirit contra mundum  2. The Path to the Servile State  3. The Servile State  4. Distributism: An alternative to the servile state  5. Scholastic thought and Bellocian economic theory  6. Belloc and the impossibility of socialism  7. Belloc’s place in the history of economic thought  8. Belloc and our world

    Biography

    Alfonso Díaz Vera (Ph.D., Rey Juan Carlos University), is a professional economist and Associate Researcher at the Instituto de Investigaciones Económicas y Sociales, Francisco de Vitoria University, Madrid, Spain. His research focuses on the history of economic thought and humanities-based economics.