Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Nuclear Iran: The Role of Islam and Capitalism
Nuclear Iran: The Role of Islam and Capitalism
Jan 14, 2026 3:12 PM

For years, the munity has pressured Iran to throw out its alleged nuclear weapons development program and has imposed crippling economic sanctions as a tool pliance. Two week-long talks have just resumed with the Islamic Republic, yet little is expected e out of them. Sanctions have only continued to mount in recent years, blocking both individuals and firms from engaging in mercial interactions with Iran, further solidifying its ongoing economic disaster. If Iran elects to agree to a settlement on the nuclear proliferation issue, lifted sanctions would mean more access to the global free market, culminating in prosperity for the Islamic Republic and its citizens and furthering capitalist ideals into a new state. Yet a faith based argument poses the greatest challenge to Iran adopting a more free market philosophy.

This poses the question: Why are the ruling theocrats so disinterested from partnering with free market states? Such is best addressed by the Ayatollah Khomeini, leader of the 1979 Islamic Revolution, who wrote in his last will and testament:

Islam does not approve of an oppressive and unbridled capitalism that deprives the oppressed masses who suffer under tyranny. On the contrary, it firmly rejects it both in the Qur’an…it considers it against social justice.

But is capitalism tyrannous and against the tenets of faith? Simply put, no. Too often, capitalism is misinterpreted as a policy of corruption and injustice – as has also been illustrated though Pope Francis’s belief that society has developed “a crude and naïve trust in the goodness of those wielding economic power.”

Greed and capitalism are not synonymous, and the free market can make room for faith and virtue to generate wealth and empower all of society’s members. In respect to Islam, Acton University lecturer Mustafa Akyoladdresses this concern stating that the religion clashes with capitalism only “if the word ‘capitalism’ means nothing other than greed, exploitation or injustice.” He continues:

However, if capitalism merely means an economic system of private property, free enterprise and free markets, then there would be nothing “un-Islamic” about it, as the economic history of the Islamic civilization proves. Being founded by a merchant (Prophet Muhammad), and directed by a scripture (the Quran) whose longest verse is about how to write a proper loan contract, Islam, at its core, is a capitalist religion…

The free market is a beautiful system that ought to be embraced, especially by states that are truly interested in building a flourishing culture. According to the International Monetary Fund, sanctions have caused a serious economic contraction effectively crippling the nation. Notwithstanding this, Iran has showed some progress in respect to an increase in both the per capita e and living standards, but Iran remains below parable counties. Just imagine what engagement with the free-market could bring to this nation.

A virtuous state can employ a capitalistic approach guided by moral principles. As the world’s only theocratic republic, Iran certainly has the capacity to do this and enforce it in the name of Islam. Capitalism need not be understood as a nefarious, greedy system, but one sustained through virtue as a means toward honorable economic flourishing.

The nation boasts the second largest natural gas reserves and the fourth largest of crude oil. The longer Iran digs in its heels on a promise, the more damaged its resources will e, or they will lose them altogether. With every year of stalled negotiations, oil refineries waste away in the desert. And more dangerously, Iran is losing its human capital, perhaps its most modity.

When assessing Iranians who have left their homeland in exchange for the American free market — data from the US Census Bureau suggests that these Iranian immigrants, Persians, could be arguably the most successful ancestral group in the nation. Fifty-eight percent of Persian-Americans earn a bachelor’s pared to 30 percent of America as whole. They also have a per capita e 1.7 times greater than native born Americans. The median household e also surpasses both native born Americans and all other immigrant groups.

The Huffington Post addresses that the Persian people have prospered in the United States “precisely because of their spirit for growth and entrepreneurship, their vision for a better life that takes into account the full spectrum of leadership skills.” America has undoubtedly profited from Iran’s “brain drain,” while the Islamic Republic should bemoan the loss of highly talented exports.

In a recent op-ed, Secretary of State John Kerry recognizes how the choice promise and re-enter the global market is essential:

If Iran is able to make these choices, there will be positive es for the Iranian people and for their economy. Iran will be able to use its significant scientific know-how for international civil nuclear cooperation. Businesses could return to Iran, bringing much needed investment, jobs and many additional goods and services. Iran could have greater access to the international financial system. The result would be an Iranian economy that begins to grow at a significant and sustainable pace, boosting the standard of living among the Iranian population.

The nuclear proliferation issue extends beyond the issue of energy, be it for peaceful or military purposes – it is a choice of either economic prosperity or continued crippling isolation from the free market. The Iranian economy has been plagued with high inflation, unemployment and a weak currency. Iran has all the resources to reverse this economic downfall — a well-educated and motivated populous as well as a vast wealth of natural resources. Unfortunately, the economic principles guiding the country have not utilized these tools to map a path to prosperity.

If the negative connotation of capitalism can be eliminated and partnered with morality and responsibility, then perhaps Iran will embrace a policy bringing it closer to the free market states of the West, which would facilitate an internal adoption of the free market. Iran not only has the potential to flourish as a global economic powerhouse, but it is its destiny to reclaim its past economic glory as the Persian Empire, if its leaders bestow it the “gift of capitalism” citizens can again flourish in global and domestic open exchange.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Avoiding the Fate of Europe
At The American Spectator, Jackson Adams reviews Samuel Gregg’s new book, ing Europe: Economic Decline, Culture, and How America Can Avoid a European Future: “Europe” is a concept Europeans are still getting used to. It should not, therefore, be surprising that it took a book written primarily for Americans to determine the sort of morass into which Western European social democracies have stepped. In his new ing Europe, Samuel Gregg provides a detailed dissection of Europe’s economic climate and the...
Lawmakers Push for Conscience Rights to be Included in Budget Bill
Fourteen members of Congress—including 13 women—sent a letter to the House leadership today asking that conscience rights be included in the ing budget bill. They mentioned specific violations of conscience rights, including the HHS Mandate: “This attack on religious freedom demands immediate congressional action,” the 14 lawmakers wrote. “Nothing short of a full exemption for both nonprofit and for-profit entities will satisfy the demands of the Constitution mon sense.” The continuing resolution that House appropriators released Monday would not cut...
Lecrae Urges Christians to Move Beyond a ‘Sacred-Secular Divide’
At last fall’s evangelical-oriented Resurgence Conference, Grammy award-winning hip-hop artist Lecrae Moore encouraged the American church to rethink how it engages culture, urging Christians to move beyond what has e a narrow, overly introverted “sacred-secular divide” (HT): We are great at talking about salvation and sanctification. We are clueless when es to art, ethics, science, and culture. Christianity is the whole truth about everything. It’s how we deal with politics. It’s how we deal with science. It’s how we deal...
Kevin Schmiesing: Catholic Social Teaching and the Sequester
In a story about looming budget cuts associated with the federal sequestration, Acton Research Fellow Kevin Schmiesing was called on by Aleteia to suggest “ways Catholic social teaching might be used to guide the cuts.” Schmiesing pointed out that the “cuts” are really “only a slow-down in the rate of growth in federal spending.” More: “Much more dramatic cuts and/or revenue increases are needed to reach a position of fiscal responsibility,” he said in an interview. But the principle of...
Sirico: Conclave Process Will Move Quickly
There is one thing certain about picking a new pope: there is nothing certain about picking a pope. While there are predictions that the conclave could begin as soon as tomorrow, it likely will take longer for the cardinals to start the sealed process. The Rev. Robert Sirico, President of the Acton Institute, believes the process will moved quickly once it begins. Sirico, who is traveling to Rome this week, said he expects the process to move swiftly. “I will...
PovertyCure: From ‘Paternalism to Partnerships’
Alex Chafuen’s Forbes article on “champions of innovation,” which Michael Miller blogged here recently, is now one of the top features on the contributors page at The Blaze. Here’s an excerpt: When Adam Smith wrote his famous “Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations,” he helped shift the terms of the discussion. Centuries earlier, work focused on different aspects of poverty. Jurists and city authorities analyzed whether the poor should be allowed to beg freely and...
The Faulty Moral Arithmetic of the GOP
Arthur Brooks, president of the American Enterprise Institute, has an op-ed in today’s Wall Street Journal that every conservative should read—and heed: Conservatives are fighting a losing battle of moral arithmetic. They hand an argument with virtually 100% public support—care for the vulnerable—to progressives, and focus instead on materialistic concerns and minority moral viewpoints. The irony is maddening. America’s poor people have been saddled with generations of disastrous progressive policy results, from welfare-induced dependency to failing schools that continue to...
When Free Speech Died in Canada
When future historians attempt to narrow down the exact point at which the concept of free speech died in Canada, they’ll likely point to Saskatchewan (Human Rights Commission) v. Whatcott, specifically this sentence: Truthful statements can be presented in a manner that would meet the definition of hate speech, and not all truthful statements must be free from restriction. Jesus might have claimed that “the truth will set you free” but in Canada speaking the same truths proclaimed in God’s...
Corporate Welfare: Why?
I have yet to read a moral argument for why the taxes collected from working men and women should be redistributed to businesses. It’s called “corporate welfare.” This is the odd state of affairs where, business pete for government funding rather than peting for customers in the marketplace. In fact, many of the biggest recipients of corporate welfare are the same businesses that hire high-priced lobbyists to help write laws in Congress that protect them petition. Why, then, do voters...
Samuel Gregg on Catholics, Welfare, and the Sequester
Should Catholics be concerned about the looming budget cuts? The National Catholic Register asked several Catholic leaders and thinkers, including Acton’s Samuel Gregg, for their response to the sequester: Re-establishing fiscal discipline and welfare reform are ponents to securing mon good, a key principle in Catholic social teaching, said Samuel Gregg, author of the new book ing Europe: Economic Decline, Culture and How America Can Avoid a European Future. Gregg, director of research for the Acton Institute for the Study...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved