"The metropolis has always been the seat of the money economy"
About this Quote
Simmel wrote at the hinge of industrial modernity, when European cities were swelling with migrants, factories, department stores, and bureaucracies that replaced face-to-face obligation with impersonal exchange. Money is the perfect urban solvent: it lets strangers coordinate without trust, history, or kinship. That efficiency is the point, and it’s also the loss. The subtext is that money doesn’t stay in your wallet; it rewires perception. It flattens qualitative differences (care, craft, honor, time) into quantitative equivalents. The city’s famous speed and stimulation aren’t just sensory; they’re economic. Everything arrives as a claim on your attention, and attention is triaged with a calculator.
The line also smuggles in a critique of power. If the metropolis is the "seat", then money has a throne - institutions, landlords, employers, banks - that governs daily life at scale. People become legible as consumers and workers, not neighbors. Simmel’s genius is to make the metropolis feel less like a place and more like a moral climate: one where freedom from tradition is purchased with a chronic coolness, a protective distance, the early outline of what we now call urban alienation.
Quote Details
| Topic | Money |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
| Cite |
Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Simmel, Georg. (2026, January 17). The metropolis has always been the seat of the money economy. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-metropolis-has-always-been-the-seat-of-the-70663/
Chicago Style
Simmel, Georg. "The metropolis has always been the seat of the money economy." FixQuotes. January 17, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-metropolis-has-always-been-the-seat-of-the-70663/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"The metropolis has always been the seat of the money economy." FixQuotes, 17 Jan. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-metropolis-has-always-been-the-seat-of-the-70663/. Accessed 9 Feb. 2026.







