‘Ordo’ versus ‘Ordnung’: Catholic or Lutheran roots of German ordoliberal economic theory?

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articlepeer-review

Standard

‘Ordo’ versus ‘Ordnung’ : Catholic or Lutheran roots of German ordoliberal economic theory? / Krarup, Troels.

In: International Review of Economics, Vol. 66, 01.04.2019, p. 305–323.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Krarup, T 2019, '‘Ordo’ versus ‘Ordnung’: Catholic or Lutheran roots of German ordoliberal economic theory?', International Review of Economics, vol. 66, pp. 305–323. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12232-019-00323-y

APA

Krarup, T. (2019). ‘Ordo’ versus ‘Ordnung’: Catholic or Lutheran roots of German ordoliberal economic theory? International Review of Economics, 66, 305–323. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12232-019-00323-y

Vancouver

Krarup T. ‘Ordo’ versus ‘Ordnung’: Catholic or Lutheran roots of German ordoliberal economic theory? International Review of Economics. 2019 Apr 1;66:305–323. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12232-019-00323-y

Author

Krarup, Troels. / ‘Ordo’ versus ‘Ordnung’ : Catholic or Lutheran roots of German ordoliberal economic theory?. In: International Review of Economics. 2019 ; Vol. 66. pp. 305–323.

Bibtex

@article{84ef905f2076438d9ece52b389c6d95d,
title = "{\textquoteleft}Ordo{\textquoteright} versus {\textquoteleft}Ordnung{\textquoteright}: Catholic or Lutheran roots of German ordoliberal economic theory?",
abstract = "Ordoliberalism is a German tradition of economic and political theory whose influence on the post-2008 European landscape has been substantial. Ordoliberalism professes a strong state to safeguarding competition against monopolies, argues for a strict anti-inflationary policy and for the rigid enforcement of debtor obligations. This reflects the early ordoliberalism{\textquoteright}s deep concern with the political and economic crises in Germany during the interwar years. The article demonstrates that early ordoliberalism was simultaneously deeply concerned with religious issues related to social order. Rather than seeing religious and economic engagements as two separate spheres, the article shows their deep interrelatedness in early ordoliberal thought. More specifically, the article seeks to challenge the established view that the religious inspirations of early ordoliberalism were predominantly Catholic, as reflected in the Thomist notion of ordo. By contrast, the article argues that ordo was largely an invention of the post-war strategy of the alliance with Catholic social thought and that the deeper concern of the early ordoliberals was predominantly with Lutheran Evangelical Ordnung",
keywords = "Faculty of Social Sciences, Ordoliberalism, Theology, Religion, Economic theory, Discourse, Archaeology, Ordoliberalism, Theology, Religion, Economic theory, Discourse, Archaeology",
author = "Troels Krarup",
year = "2019",
month = apr,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1007/s12232-019-00323-y",
language = "English",
volume = "66",
pages = "305–323",
journal = "International Review of Economics",
issn = "1865-1704",
publisher = "Springer",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - ‘Ordo’ versus ‘Ordnung’

T2 - Catholic or Lutheran roots of German ordoliberal economic theory?

AU - Krarup, Troels

PY - 2019/4/1

Y1 - 2019/4/1

N2 - Ordoliberalism is a German tradition of economic and political theory whose influence on the post-2008 European landscape has been substantial. Ordoliberalism professes a strong state to safeguarding competition against monopolies, argues for a strict anti-inflationary policy and for the rigid enforcement of debtor obligations. This reflects the early ordoliberalism’s deep concern with the political and economic crises in Germany during the interwar years. The article demonstrates that early ordoliberalism was simultaneously deeply concerned with religious issues related to social order. Rather than seeing religious and economic engagements as two separate spheres, the article shows their deep interrelatedness in early ordoliberal thought. More specifically, the article seeks to challenge the established view that the religious inspirations of early ordoliberalism were predominantly Catholic, as reflected in the Thomist notion of ordo. By contrast, the article argues that ordo was largely an invention of the post-war strategy of the alliance with Catholic social thought and that the deeper concern of the early ordoliberals was predominantly with Lutheran Evangelical Ordnung

AB - Ordoliberalism is a German tradition of economic and political theory whose influence on the post-2008 European landscape has been substantial. Ordoliberalism professes a strong state to safeguarding competition against monopolies, argues for a strict anti-inflationary policy and for the rigid enforcement of debtor obligations. This reflects the early ordoliberalism’s deep concern with the political and economic crises in Germany during the interwar years. The article demonstrates that early ordoliberalism was simultaneously deeply concerned with religious issues related to social order. Rather than seeing religious and economic engagements as two separate spheres, the article shows their deep interrelatedness in early ordoliberal thought. More specifically, the article seeks to challenge the established view that the religious inspirations of early ordoliberalism were predominantly Catholic, as reflected in the Thomist notion of ordo. By contrast, the article argues that ordo was largely an invention of the post-war strategy of the alliance with Catholic social thought and that the deeper concern of the early ordoliberals was predominantly with Lutheran Evangelical Ordnung

KW - Faculty of Social Sciences

KW - Ordoliberalism

KW - Theology

KW - Religion

KW - Economic theory

KW - Discourse

KW - Archaeology

KW - Ordoliberalism

KW - Theology

KW - Religion

KW - Economic theory

KW - Discourse

KW - Archaeology

U2 - 10.1007/s12232-019-00323-y

DO - 10.1007/s12232-019-00323-y

M3 - Journal article

VL - 66

SP - 305

EP - 323

JO - International Review of Economics

JF - International Review of Economics

SN - 1865-1704

ER -

ID: 216919008