World | Pope Benedict XVI Pope Urges New World Order for Global Economy By Nick McMaster Posted Jul 7, 2009 5:03 PM CDT Copied In this photo provided by the Vatican newspaper L'Osservatore Romano Pope Benedict XVI signs his third encyclical of his pontificate, at the Vatican, Monday, July 6, 2009. (AP Photo/L'Osservatore Romano, ho) Pope Benedict delivers a broad criticism of contemporary capitalism in his latest encyclical, the Washington Post reports. The biggest problem with businesses today is that “they are almost exclusively answerable to their investors,” Benedict writes in the 144-page document. He proposes a radically different economic model in which access to food and water are declared universal human rights, wealthy nations share with poorer ones, and a “world political authority” is set up to help manage things. Benedict has timed the release of the encyclical carefully—tomorrow world leaders will gather in Italy to discuss the global financial crisis at the G8 summit. Despite the generally leftward bent of the document, the encyclical also includes prescriptions on more conservative Catholic topics: birth control, for example, is described as not just immoral but economically negative because it decreases the “brain pool.” Read These Next Bodies found at lifetime felon's former home. Netflix plan to buy Warner Bros. isn't sitting well in Hollywood. Olivia Nuzzi, Vanity Fair to part. Looks like we have a date for the Taylor Swift-Travis Kelce nuptials. Report an error