Skip to content
CityAM
Main navigation
  • News
    • News
      • Latest Business News
      • Economics
      • Politics
      • Tech
      • Banking
      • FTSE 100 Live
      • Retail
      • Insurance
      • Legal
      • Property
      • Transport
      • Markets
    • From our partners
      • AON
      • Bayes Business School
      • Canada BIDs
      • Central London Alliance CIC
      • Destination City
      • Halkin
      • Olympia
      • Inside Saudi
      • Tottenham Hotspur Stadium
      • Santander X
      • YEAR SIX Dividend
    • Featured

      Prem Rugby needs to switch up its calendar to stop final being banished to fringes

      GettyImages 2220159051 showing a significant news event with key figures discussing major topics in a formal setting

      Submit a story

      Tell us your story.

      Submit
  • Opinion
  • Sport
    • Latest Sports News
      • Sport
      • Sport Business
    • From our partners
      • The Morning Briefing: SBS x CityAM
      • Aramco Team Series
      • LIV Golf
    • Featured

      Prem Rugby needs to switch up its calendar to stop final being banished to fringes

      GettyImages 2220159051 showing a significant news event with key figures discussing major topics in a formal setting

      Submit a story

      Tell us your story.

      Submit
  • Life&Style
    • Life&Style
      • Life&Style
      • Toast the City Awards
      • The Magazine
      • Travel
      • Culture
      • Motoring
      • Wellness
      • The RED BULLETiN
      • Do it with Shared Ownership
      • Media Speak Hub
    • Featured

      VW Golf R 2026 long-term review: Final verdict on a classic hot hatch

      Volkswagen Golf parked on a city street showcasing sleek design and modern features in an urban environment

      Submit a story

      Tell us your story.

      Submit
  • Investec
  • Events
  • Latest Paper
Thursday 03 November 2011 8:51 pm  |  Updated:  Friday 31 May 2019 12:06 am

The zombie menace of anti-capitalist thought

By: KCS-content

Add as a preferred source on Google

WHEN the Occupy protest movement began, how twenty-first century it seemed: leaderless, emergent and driven by a fury at unprecedented cronyism between high finance and high politics. But how quickly it has decayed, in its London incarnation at least, into reheated anti-capitalist slogans with nothing original to say.

Commerce is ancient, and so is the criticism of it. More than two thousand years ago, the supreme Latin poet Virgil wrote in the Aeneid: “To what crime do you not drive the hearts of men, accursed hunger for gold?” In 120AD, shoppers in the forum of Oinoanda in Asia Minor had to trade under a minatory inscription from the works of Epicurus that warned them “one must regard wealth beyond what is natural as of no more use than water to a container that is full to overflowing.” Even Aristotle, perhaps Western civilisation’s most important philosopher, thought trade was inconsistent with human virtue and that ancient Greek agoras – their forerunner to the Roman forum – “should be clear of all merchandise”.

The deep and ancient roots of this kind of criticism run all the way up to our own time, through an aristocratic disdain for those whose money came from trade to the snobbish dislike of new money in the 1980s. Today it is embodied in anti-capitalist protests and May Day marches.

But there is a crucial difference between the old antagonism for commerce and its modern inheritors. Today we know it was a mistake. We now know that a suspicion of free exchange held back human society for centuries from the unimaginable economic benefits that we have witnessed. Since the eighteenth century, when a theoretical appreciation of trade’s benefits in the work of Adam Smith met its practical demonstration in the industrial revolution, millions have been and continue to be lifted from poverty and subsistence by the power of capitalism.

Aristotle and Virgil had an excuse for their error. They had not seen what trade could do. What makes the stale anti-capitalist slogans at St Paul’s so dispiriting is not just that they lack originality, but that the ancient suspicion they echo has been visibly disproved. To be anti-capitalist in fifth-century Athens was wrong but not so obviously foolish; to be so in a twenty-first century city made rich by trade is at best incoherent.

And yet, despite the evidence, these old and ugly suspicions abide. A cardboard sign waved outside St Paul’s cries “Ban Usury”, as if it were still the Middle Ages, and we did not know what that prohibition meant, not just in terms of economic restriction, but for the fate of Europe’s Jews.

Anti-capitalism is a kind of mental zombie. It’s intellectual case is dead, but still it rises again and again, hungry to eat up our brains and turn us too into empty, destructive enemies of prosperity and peace. This camp is now just the latest successor to the Carnival against Capital in the summer of 1999, which ended in violence and damage to the LIFFE building; it is cousin to the May Day protests of 2000, that ended with Churchill’s statue and the cenotaph defaced. There was a spark of justice in the initial motive behind the Occupy movement, but its current representatives have nothing to offer but an empty atavism.

Marc Sidwell is the business features editor for CityAM

Share this article

  • Facebook
  • X
  • LinkedIn
  • WhatsApp
  • Email

Similarly tagged content:

Sections

  • Opinion

Categories

  • Opinion

Related Topics

  • NULL

Trending Articles

  • As it happened: Stocks sink after Fed and Bank of England opt for hawkish hold; Oil price tumbles

  • More Big Four blues as Deloitte plans to slash UK audit roles

  • Baillie Gifford in line for Anthropic windfall just months after £3.6bn SpaceX bonanza

  • Revolut pays compensation for waking customer up with push notifications

  • City investors raise alarm on Burnham’s Chancellor pick

More from CityAM

  • The Capitalist: CityAM dirty stop outs blame the Guildhall lost and found

    Life&Style
    Anna and Adam receiving recognition at the Guildhall CityAM Awards ceremony, celebrating excellence in business leadership.
  • The Capitalist: Claridge’s launches the ‘Mayfair Meal Deal’

    Opinion
    Claridges Hotel exterior showcasing elegant architecture with iconic entrance in a bustling city environment.
  • An apology to Keir Starmer

    Business
    Keir Starmer
  • Why democracy needs the rich

    Opinion
    Experts believe an exit tax could stem to flow of wealthy residents leaving the UK
  • Burnham’s ‘neoliberalism’ critique is just Thatcher karaoke

    Opinion
    AI-powered retro 80s karaoke with Burnham performing under colorful lights at a lively event.
  • Trump officials claim Iran is ‘weaponising global trade’

    Economics
    Pete Hegseth speaking passionately at a news conference podium with a focused audience in the background
  • City watchdog probes Mastercard, Visa, Paypal for alleged anti-competitive conduct

    Regulation
    Mastercard logo prominently displayed on a sleek office building, symbolizing global financial services and innovation.
  • Anti-US sentiment and Iran to have major World Cup security impact

    Sport Business
    Get premium access to exclusive content with GettyImages, showcasing diverse, high-quality stock images for business and m...

CityAM Canada — business, markets and opinion for Canadian readers.

Sections

  • Business
  • Markets
  • Tech
  • AI
  • Economics
  • Opinion
  • Cities

Company

  • About
  • Contact

Legal

  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy
© 2026 CityAM Canada. All rights reserved.
Terms · Privacy · Cookies