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Can the Market Economy Be Redeemed

Contact: Audra Jennings, The B&B Media Group, 800-927-0517 x104, ajennings@tbbmedia.com

 

DALLAS, October 7 /Christian Newswire/ -- The influence of economic markets is impossible to escape. It's there every morning when we turn on a light switch, run water to brush our teeth, or pour a bowl of cereal. These goods and services we take for granted are produced by the acts of literally thousands of economic agents (people doing a job) making millions of little decisions that collectively add up to the stuff of our lives. Markets have the power to bring us the things we want—and that power often leads to destruction. Why is it that the same economic forces that produce good things for us like penicillin and housing are just as effective at bringing us things like pornography and heroin? How can the same systems of production generate such a wide array of good and bad outcomes?

 

In his new book, Charting the Course (Authentic), Dr. Bruce Howard, professor of economics and finance at Wheaton College, grapples with the dilemma of reconciling fixed, transcendent moral values with an economic system based on relative value. Howard insists there is a way to move forward, that we can influence the economy in a way that will bring positive change to the world. "While it is true that markets have no values, they are wonderful mirrors for reflecting the values that people bring to the marketplace each and every day," he states. "If people bring the right values, then markets will produce the right outcomes. People from all walks of life have a shared vision for the economic world in which they want to live. We do know what is right. The task before us is to take what we know and apply these practical principles in daily economic life."

 

Charting the Course delivers a set of values that will enable any reader who is concerned about morality in the marketplace to navigate the choppy, morally murky waters of commerce with clarity and confidence. As Howard educates his readers about the nature of market economics, he provides real, actionable examples of the positive results that occur when we bring positive values to the marketplace. This book also speaks to leaders who desire a better understanding of their specific responsibilities and opportunities for providing moral and ethical direction to the organizations they lead.

 

www.authenticpublishing.com