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ADDRESS OF THE HOLY FATHER TO
THE PONTIFICAL ACADEMY OF SOCIAL SCIENCES Friday,
27 April 2001
Ladies and Gentlemen of the Pontifical Academy of Social
Sciences,
1. Your President has just expressed your pleasure at being here
in the Vatican to address a subject of concern to both the social sciences and
the Magisterium of the Church. I thank you, Professor Malinvaud, for your kind
words, and I thank all of you for the help you are generously giving the Church
in your fields of competence. For the Seventh Plenary Session of the Academy you
have decided to discuss in greater depth the theme of globalization, with
particular attention to its ethical implications.
Since the collapse of the collectivist system in Central and
Eastern Europe, with its subsequent important effects on the Third World,
humanity has entered a new phase in which the market economy seems to have
conquered virtually the entire world. This has brought with it not only a
growing interdependence of economies and social systems, but also a spread of
novel philosophical and ethical ideas based on the new working and living
conditions now being introduced in almost every part of the world. The Church
carefully examines these new facts in the light of the principles of her social
teaching. In order to do this, she needs to deepen her objective knowledge of
these emerging phenomena. That is why the Church looks to your work for the
insights which will make possible a better discernment of the ethical issues
involved in the globalization process.
2. The globalization of commerce is a complex and rapidly
evolving phenomenon. Its prime characteristic is the increasing elimination of
barriers to the movement of people, capital and goods. It enshrines a kind of
triumph of the market and its logic, which in turn is bringing rapid changes in
social systems and cultures. Many people, especially the disadvantaged,
experience this as something that has been forced upon them, rather than as a
process in which they can actively participate.
In my Encyclical Letter Centesimus Annus, I noted that
the market economy is a way of adequately responding to people’s economic
needs while respecting their free initiative, but that it had to be controlled
by the community, the social body with its common good (cf. Nos. 34, 58). Now
that commerce and communications are no longer bound by borders, it is the
universal common good which demands that control mechanisms should accompany the
inherent logic of the market. This is essential in order to avoid reducing all
social relations to economic factors, and in order to protect those caught in
new forms of exclusion or marginalization.
Globalization, a priori, is neither good nor bad. It will
be what people make of it. No system is an end in itself, and it is necessary to
insist that globalization, like any other system, must be at the service of the
human person; it must serve solidarity and the common good.
3. One of the Church’s concerns about globalization is that it
has quickly become a cultural phenomenon. The market as an exchange mechanism
has become the medium of a new culture. Many observers have noted the
intrusive, even invasive, character of the logic of the market, which reduces
more and more the area available to the human community for voluntary and public
action at every level. The market imposes its way of thinking and acting, and
stamps its scale of values upon behaviour. Those who are subjected to it often
see globalization as a destructive flood threatening the social norms which had
protected them and the cultural points of reference which had given them
direction in life.
What is happening is that changes in technology and work
relationships are moving too quickly for cultures to respond. Social, legal
and cultural safeguards – the result of people’s efforts to defend the
common good – are vitally necessary if individuals and intermediary groups are
to maintain their centrality. But globalization often risks destroying these
carefully built up structures, by exacting the adoption of new styles of
working, living and organizing communities. Likewise, at another level, the use
made of discoveries in the biomedical field tend to catch legislators
unprepared. Research itself is often financed by private groups and its results
are commercialized even before the process of social control has had a chance to
respond. Here we face a Promethean increase of power over human nature, to the
point that the human genetic code itself is measured in terms of costs and
benefits. All societies recognize the need to control these developments and
to make sure that new practices respect fundamental human values and the common
good.
4. The affirmation of the priority of ethics corresponds to an
essential requirement of the human person and the human community. But not all
forms of ethics are worthy of the name. We are seeing the emergence of patterns
of ethical thinking which are by-products of globalization itself and which bear
the stamp of utilitarianism. But ethical values cannot be dictated by
technological innovations, engineering or efficiency; they are grounded in the
very nature of the human person. Ethics cannot be the justification or
legitimation of a system, but rather the safeguard of all that is human in any
system. Ethics demands that systems be attuned to the needs of man, and not
that man be sacrificed for the sake of the system. One evident consequence of
this is that the ethics committees now usual in almost every field should be
completely independent of financial interests, ideologies and partisan political
views.
The Church on her part continues to affirm that ethical
discernment in the context of globalization must be based upon two inseparable
principles:
– First, the inalienable value of the human person,
source of all human rights and every social order. The human being must
always be an end and not a means, a subject and not an object, nor a
commodity of trade.
– Second, the value of human cultures, which no
external power has the right to downplay and still less to destroy.
Globalization must not be a new version of colonialism. It must respect
the diversity of cultures which, within the universal harmony of
peoples, are life’s interpretive keys. In particular, it must not
deprive the poor of what remains most precious to them, including their
religious beliefs and practices, since genuine religious convictions are
the clearest manifestation of human freedom.
As humanity embarks upon the process of globalization, it can no
longer do without a common code of ethics. This does not mean a single dominant
socio-economic system or culture which would impose its values and its criteria
on ethical reasoning. It is within man as such, within universal humanity
sprung from the Creator’s hand, that the norms of social life are to be sought.
Such a search is indispensable if globalization is not to be just another name
for the absolute relativization of values and the homogenization of life-styles
and cultures. In all the variety of cultural forms, universal human values
exist and they must be brought out and emphasized as the guiding force of all
development and progress.
5. The Church will continue to work with all people of good will
to ensure that the winner in this process will be humanity as a whole, and not
just a wealthy elite that controls science, technology, communication and the
planet’s resources to the detriment of the vast majority of its people. The
Church earnestly hopes that all the creative elements in society will cooperate
to promote a globalization which will be at the service of the whole person
and of all people.
With these thoughts, I encourage you to continue to seek an ever
deeper insight into the reality of globalization, and as a pledge of my
spiritual closeness I cordially invoke upon you the blessings of Almighty God.
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