This is great. Many I hadn't heard of before. Thanks
Given your interest in Christianity, one that you might enjoy is
The Spirit of Democratic Capitalism by Michael Novak. He is writing from a Catholic perspective with former socialist leanings & it chronicles how he became disenchanted with those ideals, making the case for capitalism based on Christian moral principals (the "spirit" of democratic capitalism).
RE: "Chicago Boys", I finished Niall Ferguson's
The Ascent of Money recently & thought he did a decent job of highlighting the Chilean project, although maybe in less detail than you'd prefer.
I was surprised to enjoy the discussion of money in Yuval Harari's
Sapiens as much as I did.
I'm currently slogging through Friedman's
A Monetary History of the United States as well as a book called
The Growth of Economic Thought by Henry Spiegel. Both are pretty in the weeds and very academic, but provide great detail and are something of a project for me.
Other books I've read on the subject this year:
- Adam Smith by Jesse Norman
- The Future of Capitalism by Paul Collier
- Finance and the Good Society by Robert Shiller
- The Wisdom of Finance by Mihir Desai
- Reimagining Capitalism by Rebecca Henderson
- Redeeming Capitalism by Kenneth Barnes
- Completing Capitalism by Bruno Roche
Among the spate of
[Verb] Capitalism books I have yet to read
Conscious Capitalism, but, of the list above, I can only really recommend the first two.
ETA: just realized you said "religious history". Christianity was a presumption