JOURNAL OF GLOBAL TRADE, ETHICS AND LAW
Volume 1 Issue 3, 2023
FORGING A MORAL BASIS FOR EMERGING
ECONOMIES
Yeomin Yoon
1
1
Seton Hall University, South Orange, United States of America, Yeomin.Yoon@shu.edu.
Abstract. Aristotle said that politics is the master science. What he calls politics is not
what is now called political science but the culmination of ethics. Per Aristotle, economics,
a dimension of ethics, posits the eudaimonia (human flourishing or well-being, erroneously
translated as happiness) or summum bonum for human society and describes the regional
structures of human social existence. Economics cannot, therefore, be a positive science but
must be a normative science.
Morality has disappeared from economics being taught at American universities. The
prevailing paradigm adopted by mainstream economics is Homo Economicus, which is the
“wrong reduction of a man.” Such a gross reduction of a human into a rational agent who
maximizes his utility subject to the given budget constraint leaves dormant higher human
values (compassion, empathy, brotherhood, and sisterhood, to name a few), and this
mechanical decision-maker is likely to destroy himself and the society in which he operates.
Economics (taught and practiced in America) is the fish that has jumped out of its pond and
is now dying of thirst. Ethics is the water that gives it life. The best way to save it is to bring
economics back to the pond where it belongs. What is truly needed is a paradigm shift in the
teaching and practice of economics.
Last but not least, economists in emerging countries should forge a moral basis for their
national economy and form a vision of how to construct a system of political economy that
will achieve the maximum well-being of the citizens and social justice. In doing so, they
should synthesize their normative value judgments with scientific perspectives in economics.
Old, labelled models like capitalism and socialism are modifiable constructs.
Keywords: Homo Economicus; Ethics; Political Economy; Smith Problem.
DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.10059725 © 2023 Akademia Profile ltd., London
Journal of Global Trade, Ethics and Law
ISSN 2977-0025 (Online). CC BY 4.0