This paper develops the concept of the Economics of Belonging, an analytical framework derived from the broader Philosophy of Belonging. The central argument is that economic systems should not be understood solely as mechanisms for allocating resources or maximizing efficiency. Rather, they must be interpreted as institutional structures that organize social belonging within productive and distributive processes. The paper first examines the historical feedback relationship between philosophy and economics. Economic thought originally emerged from philosophical reflection on moral behavior and social cooperation, particularly in the work of Adam Smith. Over time, economics developed into a highly formalized discipline focusing on growth, macroeconomic stability, income distribution, and the development of capabilities. While these objectives remain essential, they do not fully explain the deeper institutional conditions that sustain social cooperation. The Economics of Belonging introduces belonging as the integrating objective of economic organization. Economic growth, macroeconomic stability, income distribution, and the development of capabilities are interpreted as intermediate objectives that contribute to the construction of stable systems of belonging. When belonging weakens, economic cooperation becomes fragile and societies may experience instability, exclusion, and institutional breakdown. The paper also situates economics within a broader ontological framework developed in the Philosophy of Belonging, which interprets social reality as stratified across material, biological, and institutional levels. Within this framework, economics operates primarily at the institutional level where markets, norms, and organizations coordinate social cooperation. By integrating insights from classical political economy, neoclassical economics, institutional economics, development economics, and capability theory, the Economics of Belonging proposes a broader framework for understanding economic performance. The central conclusion is that long-term economic development depends not only on efficiency and growth but on the institutional capacity of societies to generate durable structures of belonging that allow individuals and firms to participate productively in economic life.
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Carlos Federico Obregon Diaz
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Carlos Federico Obregon Diaz (Sun,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69b8f162deb47d591b8c64e7 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19037228