Li Jing
Lecturer,
Buddhist Academy of China
It can be seen
from the very definition of economy and ethics: economics suggests
meeting material needs, and ethics should meet spiritual needs. Material
culture and spiritual culture are two basic essentials for human life
and activities, and none of them are considered dispensable. Materialism
forces the mind to be full of ‘money consciousness’ and disregards
ethical ideas in our social and living spaces by paying attention only
to material needs while ignoring spiritual needs. Buddhist
ethical-economics tries to mediate personal attachments between material
culture and spiritual culture. Only through economic development under
restrictions mandating ethical requirements can our society have
harmonious and positive social ethos.Buddhist precepts, and theory of
cause and effect can restrict immoralities; hence, when every
occupational-material activity runs under standards of law and morality —
then and only through such, can one be honest when being officer,
business-person, banker, farmer, etc. As it is, only under ethical
requirements can the economy really serve human society and built a
harmonious and fair economic order. Therefore, we can say Buddhist
“ethical economics” is of great realistic significance to construct a
good socio-economic system.
I. Five
Precepts as the Foundation of Ethical Economics
The Buddhist
“Five Precepts”, are: not killing, not stealing, no sexual misconduct,
not lying, no consuming of intoxicants — as standards for being human,
and as standards for developing modern enterprises and economic-markets.
In society, currently, where materialism excels over anything else,
people use all kinds of approaches to make money, even refuse to have
anything to do with, or at the expense of kin and friends - bent solely
towards profit - severely affecting people’s ethical views. If our
social system, with different societies, families, enterprises, units
and government-departments, etc., lose minimum “credit” - our societies
and families would lose their ethics on their own accord/account. Being
rich materially and extremely poor spirituality leads to the disorder of
society and breakdown of family; and accordingly, our living
circumstances become worse and worse, the consciousness of “credit”
becomes weaker and weaker, people worship and become addicted to money,
like animals, and our societies become corrupt and degenerated.Both
being in business and enterprise, management must submit to being under
restrictions of laws and ethics. It is said that “without carpenter’s
compasses and square, square and circle can not be drawn”; also
mentioned is: “there are laws for a country, as there are rules in
families.” Buddhism claims that without precepts, there will be no bodhi
(wisdom), and “the five precepts and the ten good acts” are the only
rules for being human. Whether the laws of country or precepts for
Buddhists — the intention is to build people’s consciousness of
“credit”. In Buddhism, “the five precepts and the ten good acts” advise
people to be honest with others and to the laws of the nation, as well.
If everyone can discipline oneself according to “the five precepts and
the ten good acts”, then every place can be friendly, society will be
peaceful and there will be harmony in families. Five virtues “human
(ren), righteousness (yi), propriety (li), wisdom (zhi), and good faith
(xin)” of Confucianism have similar meaning, but are defined differently
when seen as the Buddhist “five precepts”. It is widely known, that in
Confucianism has the ethics of “three obedience and five virtues” — but
many have no idea that ethics of “five precepts and ten good acts” are
even more detailed than those of Confucianism. Since social morals,
family ethics and the consciousness of credit become weaker, everyone
urgently needs: “five precepts and ten good acts” to wake up the
consciousness of “credit”, and to adjust and improve bad
social-ideologies. This is the Buddhist “credit” for ethical
economic.II. Ethical Economics takes “Cause and effect” as its
Equality-Principle
The theory of
‘cause and effect’ is a basic theory in Buddhism. Without the cause and
effect theory, all teachings of Buddhism are hazarded. Cause and effect
theory is neither a kind of religious belief, nor a so-called
“superstition” as people commonly misunderstand; it is a scientific view
of certain philosophical significance, and a dialectical judgment for
the existence of everything in the world - it has certain significance
of scientific value. Buddhism claims that everything in the world
originates dependent on the arising of circumstances between one and
another thing — and enters into a continuous cycle between cause and
effect: from the past to the present and from the present into the
future. These three periods of time work as cause and effect, and
everything arises consequently, because if there is cause, there will be
effect, and vice versa — these causes and effects generate more
circumstances for becoming - endlessly. Thus, the cause and effect of
richness and poverty come into being, from unethical economics involved
with materialism.Buddhism claims everyone’s good fortune and material
enjoyment have its cause and effect, and are only partially affected by
the effort of this life and largely determined by the cause of good or
evil karma in the past life. Good or evil karma in the past life
affected the richness and poverty of this life; good or evil behavior in
the present will affect the richness and poverty of the future life,
hence there is cause and effect ethical-view cycling from the past, into
the present, and into the future - continuously. Buddhism claims good
and evil affect principles: “good will be rewarded with good, and evil
with evil”, so it encourages people to do more good things to affect
their good fortune, i.e.: change one’s destiny by changing one’s own
deeds — to be ethically-good [wholesome] deeds. It is said that “never
avoid doing good deed no matter how trifling; and never do evil deed no
matter how trifling.” The purpose of the Buddhist cause and effect
theory is to teach people to neither violate social and natural
principles, nor violate social-ethical standards in business and
corporate management. This ethics guarantees the rules of equal
transactions in the market-economy, and the Buddhist cause and effect
theory guides the ethical views in people’s mind, and appeals that one
should not use immoral/unwholesome approaches to gain personal profit.
Good-cause breeds good-effect, evil-cause breeds evil-effect. There is
another slogan: “you reap what you have sown” — emphasizing the
consistency between well-doing and happiness — wholesome deeds
accumulate merit, evil deeds accumulate disaster. In the sense of
ethical economics — this tells us that one must become responsible for
one’s own deeds, and to undertake the result of one’s own deeds; and
further serves as a caution for people to become self-disciplined. It is
said that “virtue brings good-fortune while evil-doing brings
misfortune”, demonstrating the need of certain rules to be beneficial to
everyone, and not work as a particular man’s will. Only under the
restriction of ethics can equally developed economic benefits be
attained. This is the equality economic ethics view.
III. Ethical
Economics takes ‘Charity’ as an Altruistic Idea
The basic idea
of Buddhism is having a pure mind with few desires, eliminating all
kinds of greed from one’s mind; thus it is quite contradictory between
altruistic ideas and economic conceptions. In another respect, it is not
contradictory: the purpose of Buddhist ethical economics values
“altruism”; Buddhism believes the purpose of economic development is not
merely to meet personal benefits, but to strive for the benefit and
salvation of all beings. There are two kinds of giving: “monetary giving
and dharma giving”, in Buddhism; money-giving assists those who need
helps materially - hence, this kind of economic view is based on
“charity”.From the viewpoint of Buddhism, economic benefit, such as
‘money’ — there is nothing wrong with it in ‘itself’, but it should be
earned wholesomely or used properly — to be beneficial to all sentient
beings and society. But, owing to being too greedy and too
self-conscious, people become slaves to paper — ‘money’, unconsciously,
in economic tidal waves; bad ideas such as self-enjoyment and
self-display through material prosperity are results from giving up
“ethical economics”. Hence, being aware of “ethical economics” is
important for socio-economic development now, for all of us. When people
become aware that economic development is not merely for personal
enjoyment and display, but serves for whole society and humanity, then
people would utilize the economy to benefit society and future
generations of offspring, for building greater environments and
opportunities for future lives. Therefore, “ethical economics charity”
in Buddhism not only has moral implications, but also serves as a
fundamental guarantee for building economic benefits for future
generations of life. As the Discourse on the Theory of
Consciousness-Only (Vijnaptimatratasiddhi-sastra) states:“those Dharmas
that are beneficial and helpful to both this life and next life are
named wholesome.” In itself, good deeds are not only beneficial to this
life, but also to future life. As far as both self and others are
concerned, good deeds not only can benefit one, but also benefit all
people in society. This is charitable-ethical economics from a Buddhist
standpoint.
IV. The
Eightfold Path as Legal-Ethical Economic Preconditions
Confucianism
states: “a gentleman should earn money in the right way though everyone
needs it”; the Buddhist “Eightfold Path” also emphasizes being engaged
in right-livelihood. Buddhist teachings formulate that Buddhists should
not benefit from harming others and not to use unjust approaches. For
example, the fifth precept from the Brahmajala-sutra (or
Bodhisattva-sila-sutra, Sutra of Brahma's Net) says: “as a Buddhist,
selling or purchasing alcohol, biding others to sell or purchase
alcohol, conditions of alcohol, causes of alcohol, methods of brewage,
practices of brewage, and all kinds of alcohol are prohibited to sell or
purchase.” Alcohol deludes the mind, enabling one to commit crimes
accordingly, even harming one’s reputation, life, or another’s life.
Those who sell alcohol as their profession to make money commit
great-evil volitional-activities from violating one of the main precepts
- just as those who traffic in narcotics nowadays commit crimes by
their unjust profession and illegal approaches to making money. The
twelfth precept in Brahmajala-sutra says: “as a Buddhist... trafficking
people, slaves, maids, domestic animals, coffins and other wood-made
boxes for funeral by oneself is unacceptable, not to speak of bidding
others to do so.” Just as those who traffic people living and dead,
commit crime by immoral behavior and illegal approaches for staggering
profits. All of these violate “ethical economics” and lead to
socially-unhealthy tendencies.Particular stress must be laid on the
development of market-economics, and not to ignore the need of
ethical-moral characteristics. In order to make more money or to seek
greater economic benefits, they use any kind of exploitive-means,
finally leading to: malfeasance, enmity between parents and children,
between siblings, between relatives, and between friends - taking
various kinds of positive social phenomena for granted — turning to
looting and murder, and becoming a potluck of unwholesome activity. Thus
there are dangers everywhere and everyone becomes defensive — lacking
minimum trust and failing to give mutual aid.If you emphasize and
publicize “ethical economics”, bad phenomena centering more on
economic-benefits and less on ethics can be adjusted for
positive/wholesome change. “Right Livelihood/Employment” can be found in
the “Eightfold Path” — demanding people to engage in just/wholesome
professions, confining one’s behavior to ethical-moral pursuits leading
to one’s own benefit. Harming another’s benefit or chance is called:
“akusala-karma” (evil activity) — the “cause” of future poverty. One
should strictly recollect to only accept money earned righteously, and
not to accept money earned unwholesomely - not to strive for staggering
profits by unjust approaches, and not to do business unlawfully from
exploiting economic-ventures. Therefore, Buddhist ethical-economics is a
fundamental guarantee to legally manage modern corporations, taking
justice and legality, seriously, as preconditions; this encourages and
leads people to abide in commercial-transactions morally, maintaining
the national economic code. This is “legal” ethical economics, developed
from Buddhism.
V. Conclusion
It is
impossible to list all the sutras and treatises about “ethical-economic”
viewpoints from Buddhism in this limited space. It can be seen from the
above, that Buddhist “ethical economics” would greatly awaken society
to really-bad social phenomena and degradations in social-morality. It
reveals that one should not develop the economy while neglecting ethics.
Only through developing economically, under an ethical code, can life
be really prosperous and our living environment becomes harmonious. This
Buddhist “ethical economics” would establish consciousness-credit in
the economic markets, guaranteeing equality and mutual benefits in the
management and operation of enterprise; strengthen the development of
the “legal” management consciousness in the corporate-management; and
cultivate “charitable” enterprise ideas that regard and serve society
with love. Through the Buddhist “ethical economics” discussed above, the
wish is that we all can consummate and promote the healthy development
of our modern enterprises and endeavors.