Less than two dollars a day : a Christian view of world poverty and the free market / Kent A. Van Til.
Publication details: Grand Rapids, Mich. : William B. Eerdmans Pub., 2007.Description: xii, 180 p. ; 23 cmISBN:- 080281767X :USd16.00/5.33
- 9780802817679
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BSOP Library | BV4647.P6/V26/2007 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 00037368 |
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CHBV4501.2/M13b/2007 Basic discipleship {ch} / | BV825.3/Un2/2007 Understanding four views on the Lord's Supper / | BS1192.5/M61/2007 The way of the Lord : | BV4647.P6/V26/2007 Less than two dollars a day : | BV652.1/W15//Bk. 1 Leading out of who you are : | BV4647.I55/L16/2006 Integrity : | BT761.3/En7/2006 The great work of the Gospel : |
Includes bibliographical references (p. 162-174) and indexes.
Distributing Earth's benefits and burdens -- Defining terms -- Using the free market as distributor -- Adam Smith (1723-1790) -- The legal presuppositions of capitalism -- Psychological presuppositions of capitalism -- Mainstream economics -- The free market and distributive justice -- Why the poor won't necessarily gain from the free market's distribution -- More free exchange need not result in more well-being -- The strategy of rational satisfaction of an individual's preferences will not necessarily yield the greatest good -- The free market takes initial endowments as givens -- Even markets functioning in a pareto optimal manner will not necessarily provide basic sustenance -- The economic concept of value is not responsive to the claim to basic sustenance -- The incomparability of needs and preferences -- Conclusion -- What the Bible says about poverty -- Creation -- The Exodus and distribution of land -- Covenant law -- Advocacy for the poor -- Jubilee -- The poor are always with you -- The need to work -- Shalom -- Equality -- Bridges -- Conclusion -- Moving from the Bible to the present -- Contemporary theologies -- Basic needs -- Rights and responsibilities -- Conclusion -- Distributing benefits and burdens according to "spheres" -- Distributive justice and contemporary theory -- Abraham Kuyper -- Michael Walzer -- David Miller's appropriation of Walzer -- Summary and synthesis of Kuyper, Walzer, and Miller -- What we can really accomplish -- Promising economic directions -- Objections -- Poverty and development.