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The article in the issue 10:2:

The date of the publication:
2021-06-29
The number of pages:
57
The issue:
10:2
Commentaries:
0
The Authors
Krzysztof Opolski, Agata Gemzik-Salwach, Anna Horodecka, Andrzej J. Żuk, Justyna Chmiel, Małgorzata Kmak, Robert Zajkowski, Beata Żukowska, Aleksandra Borowska, Dominika Byrska,

Anna Horodecka is assistant professor in the Collegium of World Economy
at the Warsaw School of Economics. She gained her Ph.D. in economics
(2006) and theology (2007) and habilitation in economics 2020 for which
she received a grant from the National Science Centre. She specializes
in economic policy, heterodox economics, the methodology of economics,
business ethics and sustainability, and her habilitation focused on the
concept of human nature in contemporary economics. She was visiting
professor at some universities abroad (in Wellington, Chicago, Munich,
and Macerata).

Andrzej J. Żuk is a graduate of the Maria Curie-Skłodowska University in Lublin (M.A. in economics) and Warsaw School of Economics (Ph.D. in economics). Currently he is an assistant professor at the Institute of Economics and Finance, The John Paul II Catholic University of Lublin, Poland. His scientific interests concern the theory of economics and the history of economic thought as well as the methodology and philosophy of economics, including, above all, institutionalism, value judgments, and ethics in economics and finance.

ARTICLE:

Financialization and the Erosion of the Common Good

The phenomenon of financialization is multifaceted and can be considered from different points of view. The main purpose of the article is to show how financialization affects the erosion of the common good. To achieve this, various negative sides of financialization are described, referring to the eight principles of the common good: effective use of limited resources, freedom, prosperity, justice, responsibility, solidarity, primacy of interpersonal relations and institutional principle. Further considerations concern the presentation of possible solutions to the problem of financialization. Two perspectives are selected. First, the answer of Catholic social teaching to the phenomenon of financialization, as presented in the form of the Vatican document Oeconomicae et pecuniariae quaestiones from May 2018. Next, one of the main causes of financialization is shown: economic and financial theories, which has become the theoretical foundation for the phenomenon. On this basis, the need for new theoretical solutions based on the institutional approach in the science of economics and finance is discussed. Possible new alternative approaches, including the concept of financial personalism, are also recognized.

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