In this presentation at the 2015 Capitalism & Morality seminar in Vancouver, I argue that the crisis in Portugal, Italy, Greece, and Spain cannot be understood merely as a debt problem.
The deeper issue is culture. Debt is a symptom of a social and moral order in which productivity, responsibility, trust, and long-term thinking have been weakened. When a society lacks the cultural substrate necessary for capitalism, legal reform and financial rescue packages can only go so far.
Watch the full presentation below:
Key Takeaways
- The crisis in Portugal, Italy, Greece, and Spain is not merely a debt crisis.
- Debt reflects deeper cultural problems, including weak productivity, poor social trust, and a lack of responsibility.
- Capitalism cannot function merely through laws, institutions, or financial systems; it requires a moral and cultural foundation.
- Bailouts and reforms cannot solve problems rooted in culture.
- The West’s decline begins when it forgets that civilization depends on habits, discipline, and values that cannot be created by decree.
