000 01525 a2200277 4500
005 20150716091109.0
008 040419s xx 000 0 eng
022 _a1522-3191;
050 _aAC1.S5
082 _a050
100 _aWolf, Martin,
245 4 _aThe Morality of the Market.
_cMartin Wolf.
260 _bForeign Policy,
_c2003.
440 _aSIRS Enduring Issues 2004.
_nArticle 106,
_pBusiness,
_x1522-3191;
500 _aArticles Contained in SIRS Enduring Issues 2004.
500 _aOriginally Published: The Morality of the Market, Sept./Oct. 2003; pp. 46-50.
520 _a"The market economy rests on and encourages valuable moral qualities; provides unprecedented opportunities for people to engage in altruistic activities; underpins individual freedom and democracy; and has created societies that are, in all significant respects, less unequal than the traditional hierarchies that preceded them. In short, capitalism is the most inherently just economic system that humankind has ever devised." (FOREIGN POLICY) The author refutes market economy critics who "charge that capitalism creates gross inequality, inflicts environmental destruction, and undermines democracy."
599 _aRecords created from non-MARC resource.
650 _aBusiness ethics
650 _aCapitalism
650 _aEquality
650 _aFree enterprise
650 _aSocial ethics
710 _aProQuest Information and Learning Company
_tSIRS Enduring Issues 2004,
_pBusiness.
_x1522-3191;
942 _c UKN
999 _c34843
_d34843