Pope highlights effects of unemployment on families
(Vatican Radio) Pope Francis on Saturday highlighted the
serious problem of unemployment. His words came during a meeting with
participants attending an International Conference of the Centesimus Annus Pro
Pontifice Foundation which has been taking place in Rome this week.
The Centesimus Annus Pro Pontifice Foundation is a lay-led
non-profit-organisation whose purpose it is to promote Catholic Social
Doctrine. And is was on Saturday that Pope Francis met with those attending an
international conference in the Vatican where he highlighted the fight against
poverty and what he called the “grave problem” of unemployment.
Addressing those gathered, the Holy Father commended the
foundation for their 2017 statement which notes “that the fight against poverty
demands a better understanding of the reality of poverty as a human and not
merely an economic phenomenon.
He also highlighted that “promoting integral human
development demands dialogue and engagement with people’s needs and
aspirations, listening to the poor and their daily experience of
“multidimensional, overlapping deprivations”, and devising specific responses
to concrete situations.
The Pope said that what was needed was community and
business enterprises where the poor “are the principal actors and
beneficiaries.”
Another issue which was highlighted by Pope Francis was that
of unemployment noting that the conference had paid particular attention to the
critical issue of job creation in the context of the ongoing new technological
revolution.
How can we not be concerned, the Pope said, “about the grave
problem of unemployment among the young and among adults that have not the
means to “upgrade” themselves? It is a problem, he added, “that has
reached truly dramatic proportions in both developed and developing countries,
and needs to be addressed, not least out of a sense of intergenerational
justice and responsibility for the future.”
The Holy Father also recalled that the effects of
unemployment on families was a concern expressed by the recent Synod assemblies
on the family, which noted, “that uncertainty about work situations often
contributes to family pressures and problems, and has an effect on the family’s
ability to participate fruitfully in the life of society.”
Concluding his discourse the Pope encouraged the Foundation
to bring the light of the Gospel and “the richness of the Church’s social
teaching to these pressing issues by contributing to informed discussion,
dialogue and research, but also by committing themselves for that change of
attitudes, opinions and lifestyles which is essential for building a world of
greater justice, freedom and harmony.”
Please find the English language translation of the
Pope's discourse
Address of His Holiness Pope Francis
to the “Centesimus Annus Pro Pontifice” Foundation
20 May 2017
Dear Friends,
I offer you a warm welcome on the occasion of the International Conference of
the Centesimus Annus Pro Pontifice Foundation. I thank your President, Mr
Domingo Sugranyes Bickel, for his kind greeting in your name. I express
my appreciation for your efforts to seek other ways of understanding the
economy and progress, and business, to meet the ethical challenges posed by the
imposition of new paradigms and forms of power derived from technology, the
throwaway culture and lifestyles that ignore the poor and despise the weak (cf.
Enc. Laudato Si’, 16).
Many people are struggling to bring the whole human family together to seek a
sustainable and integral development, for we know that things can change (cf.
ibid, 13). Your Foundation is also making a valuable contribution
precisely by approaching business and finances both in the light of the rich
heritage of the Church’s social doctrine and the intelligent search for
“constructive alternatives”. Drawing on your own expertise and experience,
and in cooperation with other people of good will, you are committed to
developing models of economic growth centred on the dignity, freedom and
creativity that are the hallmark of the human person.
Your Foundation’s 2017 Statement rightly notes that the fight against poverty
demands a better understanding of the reality of poverty as a human and not
merely economic phenomenon. Promoting integral human development demands
dialogue and engagement with people’s needs and aspirations, listening to the
poor and their daily experience of “multidimensional, overlapping
deprivations”, and devising specific responses to concrete situations.
This calls for the creation, within communities and between communities and
business, of mediating structures capable of bringing people and resources
together, initiating processes in which the poor are the principal actors and
beneficiaries. Such a person-based approach to economic activity will
encourage initiative and creativity, the entrepreneurial spirit and communities
of labour and enterprise, and thus favour social inclusion and the growth of a
culture of effective solidarity.
In these days, you have paid particular attention to the critical issue of job
creation in the context of the ongoing new technological revolution. How
can we not be concerned about the grave problem of unemployment among the young
and among adults that have not the means to “upgrade” themselves? It is a
problem that has reached truly dramatic proportions in both developed and
developing countries, and needs to be addressed, not least out of a sense of
intergenerational justice and responsibility for the future. In a similar
way, efforts to address the complex of issues associated with the growth of new
technologies, the transformation of markets and the legitimate aspirations of
the workforce must take into account not only individuals but families as
well. This, as you know, was a concern expressed by the recent Synod
assemblies on the family, which noted that uncertainty about work situations
often contributes to family pressures and problems, and has an effect on the
family’s ability to participate fruitfully in the life of society (cf. Ap.
Exhort. postsin. Amoris Laetitia, 44).
Dear friends, I encourage your efforts to bring the light of the Gospel and the
richness of the Church’s social teaching to these pressing issues by
contributing to informed discussion, dialogue and research, but also by
committing yourselves for that change of attitudes, opinions and lifestyles
which is essential for building a world of greater justice, freedom and
harmony.
In offering my prayerful good wishes for the fruitfulness of your work, I
cordially invoke upon you, your families and your associates God’s blessings of
joy and peace.
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