1. “Madoff with Millions” meets “Blagojevich Way But Loose”

    December 17, 2008 by Stephen J. Haessler

    Acts committed by individuals motivated by greed or envy are wrong. But is business or political corruption always harmful to the common good? Can it ever be helpful? (more…)


  2. Between A Liquidity Trap and A Stimulus Hard Place

    December 16, 2008 by Stephen J. Haessler

    To borrow a frequently uttered and painfully obvious observation from Everett, George Clooney’s character in the film “O Brother, Where Art Thou,” we’re in a tight spot. But so are economic policy makers. (more…)


  3. Immigration Reform

    December 10, 2008 by Stephen J. Haessler

    St. Jude the Apostle is the patron saint of desperate causes. For many immigrants these days, legal difficulties and economic challenges could qualify as the subject of many prayers of petition to St. Jude. Let us consider a recent suggestion for improving immigration policy. (more…)


  4. Tiara Zarcone on Wealth Accumulation

    December 8, 2008 by Tiara Zarcone

    The Argument for Wealth Accumulation

    Big corporations, personal wealth, and free markets often receive a bad rap from Catholics.  The general consensus is that if you have a high paying job, are therefore wealthy, and to some degree enjoy that wealth, then there is something dangerously wrong.  Jesus said that “it is easier for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle than for one who is rich to enter the kingdom of God” (Matthew 19:24).  So wealth accumulation is bad, right?  Not necessarily.  (more…)


  5. Joseph Burke on The Death of Capitalism

    December 4, 2008 by Joseph Burke

    Is Capitalism Dead?

    The critics of capitalism are using the most recent financial crisis as an opportunity to declare an end to the free market system. President Nicholas Sarkozy of France, for example, pronounced an end to “laissez-faire capitalism.” (more…)


  6. Government Jobs vs. Government’s Job

    December 1, 2008 by Stephen J. Haessler

    The National Bureau of Economic Research has identified December of 2007 as the official starting date for the current recession in the United States. In that month, economic activity in the country reached a peak. A recession is sometimes defined as a general decline in economic activity that lasts more than a few months, and which shows up in the data on production, employment, and real income. (more…)


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Apostles & Markets is a resource for anyone interested in bringing principles of Catholic social doctrine together with economic analysis. (Learn More)

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I wrote Apostles & Markets with Catholic teachers in mind...
Stephen J. Haessler, Ph.D.

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