EBOOK

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First published in 1924, Hilaire Belloc's Economics for Helen is a lucid and polemical introduction to political economy, framed as an accessible explanation for an intelligent lay reader. Belloc rejects abstract, technical economics in favor of a moral and historical account of wealth, labor, property, exchange, and the modern wage system. Written in a conversational yet incisive prose style, the book belongs to the early twentieth-century tradition of Catholic social criticism and distributist thought, standing alongside Belloc's broader critique of both unrestrained capitalism and collectivist socialism. Its literary method-didactic, epigrammatic, and deliberately plain-serves its larger aim: to restore economics to the sphere of human ends rather than mere calculation. Belloc (1870–1953), Anglo-French writer, historian, parliamentarian, and one of the leading Catholic intellectuals of his age, brought to this work his lifelong concern with the social consequences of industrial modernity. Closely associated with G. K. Chesterton, he helped articulate distributism, a doctrine advocating the wide distribution of productive property. Economics for Helen reflects Belloc's conviction that economic arrangements are inseparable from culture, religion, and political freedom. This book is especially recommended to readers interested in economic thought outside orthodox academic frameworks. It remains valuable as a concise, provocative, and humane meditation on what an economy is for-and whom it ought to serve.