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The Divine Economy : How Religions Compete for Wealth, Power, and People - Paul Seabright

The Divine Economy

How Religions Compete for Wealth, Power, and People

By: Paul Seabright

Hardcover | 1 September 2024

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**Winner of the Bronze Medal, Axiom Business Book Awards 2024, Business Commentary****

Religion in the twenty-first century is alive and well across the world, despite its apparent decline in North America and parts of Europe. Vigorous competition between and within religious movements has led to their accumulating great power and wealth. Religions in many traditions have honed their competitive strategies over thousands of years. Today, they are big business; like businesses, they must recruit, raise funds, disburse budgets, manage facilities, organise transportation, motivate employees, and get their message out. In The Divine Economy, economist Paul Seabright argues that religious movements are a special kind of business: they are platforms, bringing together communities of members who seek many different things from one another spiritual fulfilment, friendship and marriage networks, even business opportunities. Their function as platforms, he contends, is what has allowed religions to consolidate and wield power.

This power can be used for good, especially when religious movements provide their members with insurance against the shocks of modern life, and a sense of worth in their communities. It can also be used for harm: political leaders often instrumentalise religious movements for authoritarian ends, and religious leaders can exploit the trust of members to inflict sexual, emotional, financial or physical abuse, or to provoke violence against outsiders. Writing in a nonpartisan spirit, Seabright uses insights from economics to show how religion and secular society can work together in a world where some people feel no need for religion, but many continue to respond with enthusiasm to its call.

'Seabright has produced an engaging and insightful book, which I found myself pondering long after I had read the last page.' Jane Shaw, Financial Times

'Enlightening.' The Economist

'Seabright has a great talent for addressing original questions. In this book, he reverses the familiar trope that religion is the antithesis of mere economics. On the contrary, he argues, religions are competing businesses: they attract people by providing services they value, from the mundane - a community in which to find a compatible mate - to the sublime - a sense of life's meaning.' Martin Wolf, Financial Times

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