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<title>Economics and ethics:</title>
<subTitle>a Christian inquiry</subTitle>
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<namePart>Wogaman, J. Philip.</namePart>
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<note>J. Philip Wogaman

&#34;The great economic debate of our time is over priorities. The outcome of the debate hinges upon value commitments which are sometimes visible and sometimes invisible, but always present.&#34;

J. Philip Wogaman

Arguing that &#34;a theological perspective can help liberate one from the idolatries and illusions of the economic struggle as it is often conducted,&#34; Wogaman provides a fresh look at the interrelationships of ethics and economics. He offers a pro-vocative assessment of five specific priorities-productivity, equity and security, employment and educational opportunity, conservation, and a new world order en route to a critique of the current overreliance upon the free-market mechanism to make economic policy decisions. His conclusion: we must close the gap between rich and poor, establish a fabric of in-ternational regulation, and strive for world peace. In fact, &#34;it is time for us to recover our sense of priority about the things that really matter.&#34;

J. PHILIP WOGAMAN is Professor of Christian Social Ethics at Wesley Theological Seminary, Washington, D.C. His books in-clude Faith and Fragmentation: Christianity for a New Age, recently published by Fortress Press.</note>
<subject authority=""><topic>Free enterprise</topic></subject>
<subject authority=""><topic>Capitalism</topic></subject>
<subject authority=""><topic>Economics</topic></subject>
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