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Principles and Economic Style Moulded Into Sustainability and Foreign Policy Interests

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Social Market Economy
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Abstract

“The concept of the Social Market Economy links the principle of freedom on the market and the instrument of competitive economics with the principle of solidarity and with mechanisms of social compensation. This link is not a mere smart decision of a purely institutional wisdom, but it lays on a decision on values which is borne by the moral foundations of our European culture”. This is the statement of the Commission of the Bishops’ Conferences of the European Community. Most politicians and even academics who see themselves as Catholics normally take seriously most doctrinal declarations of this church’s leadership. Thus, it is expected that such declarations are to be found to a larger or smaller extent in drafted legislation and in created institutions. From such statements, the Social Market Economy develops advantages and shortcomings. Its advantages are related to its purpose of organising economic and social life at a national level in such a way that a competitive and creative balance of power between the economic agents, government and individuals as actors is achieved. Another advantage is its attempt at inclusiveness which is done via the corporatist approach in social and professional relations. Convincing individuals to join professional groups and defend their common interest is an inclusive and integrative approach. Nevertheless, corporatism can also be a shortcoming of the Social Market Economy because it induces a danger. If professional groups defend their interests in common, they have quite a big chance to dominate not only some of the members of parliament via their professional affiliation but even minister and thus parts of government. Particular interests are served here, even though they are not individual interests but small group interests. This happens at the expense of the general interest when such corporatist groups from within the Social Market Economy delay and sometimes block necessary economic reforms. Following the economic and financial crisis in 2007–2009, the national economic and social system in place in Germany and Austria had become known enough in order for the term “social market economy” to be adopted in art. 3 (3) of the EU Treaty of Lisbon. Thus, this system managed to pass from a national terminology in economic policy, which at times was even taken for a mere political label given in Germany, to a legally consecrated term enshrined in the EU Treaty texts.

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Notes

  1. 1.

    See COMECE (2011) pp. 136–137: “Das Konzept der Sozialen Marktwirtschaft verbindet das Prinzip der Freiheit auf dem Markt und das Instrument der Wettbewerbswirtschaft mit dem Prinzip der Solidarität und Mechanismen des sozialen Ausgleichs. Diese Verbindung ist keine bloße Klugheitsentscheidung einer rein institutionellen Vernunft, sondern beruht auf einer Wertentscheidung, die getragen wird von den moralischen Grundlagen unserer europäischen Kultur”.

  2. 2.

    Comp. Kean (2005).

  3. 3.

    See The Economist (2011, July 9). If it is to keep with a strict econometric view, we have to add that this is the minimum level of debt. Nobody (possibly with intelligence reports and forecasts which often go even 50 years into the future) seems to really know how much total debt is. The reason is due to the type of obligations of payment taken into account when calculating total debt.

  4. 4.

    Quoted in Joffe (1992) p. 69.

  5. 5.

    Pontifical Council For Justice and Peace (2011), pp. 21–22

  6. 6.

    See Müller-Armack (1965), pp. 263–264.

  7. 7.

    See Erixon (2013). Here, one can read a comprehensive but brief analysis of the new meaning for trade liberalisation in the context of the ongoing EU–US TTIP negotiations. The article can be found on the portal of the European Centre for International Political Economy, accessed March 2, 2014: http://www.ecipe.org/media/media_hit_pdfs/TTIP_and_the_Shifting_Structure_of_Trade_Policy.pdf.

  8. 8.

    See Floridi (2012). A copy of the report is available at http://www.ecipe.org/publications/acta-ethical-analysis-failure-and-its-lessons/.

  9. 9.

    See The Economist (April 21, 2012) p. 47–ff. This will be the case, for example, with the new technology of 3D printing. Such 3D printing software is already available for download from websites (hosted who knows where) and the product printed at home (ordinary 3D printers are already available at hand for € 3,000). This means that the software could be downloaded (or hacked) from a website abroad, but products will be physically created within the borders of the home country. Thus, international trade transactions will be circumvented, and any need of supplying it by known international transaction types and logistics will be deleted from the list of demanded services on the market. Still, one or two decades separate us until the market price for this new technology and machines will have lowered to a critical level and become accessible en masse. Until then, we remain within the known status quo.

  10. 10.

    See Freytag (2009). p. 51.

  11. 11.

    Comp. Gianviti et al. (2010), p. 25–29.

  12. 12.

    Comp. Bergman et al. (2012), p. 20–ff and the cover of that weekly magazine with the title “Geheimoperation Samson. Wie Deutschland Atommacht Israel aufrüstet”. The article alleges that the German arms industry delivered, possibly just as it also delivered to Greece, high-tech submarines with nuclear propulsion and which can easily be transformed into carrying nuclear missile heads.

  13. 13.

    The remark to be made here is that German economic stability is largely based on defence contracting. The country has become after the crisis of 2007–2009, the third biggest weapons exporter worldwide. This should have not the best impact on the ethical and moral legitimacy of the Social Market Economy.

  14. 14.

    See Celac (2012), pp. 2 and 3.

  15. 15.

    See Celac (2012), p. 3.

  16. 16.

    See Gruchy (1972), p. 292.

  17. 17.

    Comp. McKay et al. (1991), p. 704, Table 22.1 where the relative development indexes of Western countries in 1750, 1850, 1880, 1900 and 1913 are shown.

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Mureşan, Ş.S. (2014). Principles and Economic Style Moulded Into Sustainability and Foreign Policy Interests. In: Social Market Economy. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-09213-3_7

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