So I posted the actual word rather than the DM style reportage but Jeremy Corbyn also said this - and the two things tie together:
As the Financial Times put it last month our “financial system still looks a lot like the pre-crisis one” and the capitalist system still faces a “crisis of legitimacy”, stemming from the crash.
There seems to me to be a great deal of agreement that capitalism, or rather the neo-liberal capitalism that has moved the Conservative party so far to the right, is now being found a counter balance in the proposals coming from Jeremy Corbyn's Labour party and, importantly, no where else.
This is certainly moving what has been the accepted "there is no alternative" view and opening up a move to consider a different sort of economics . This is certainly moving or consolidating many people's view, as we saw in the last election, away from the far-right neo-liberalism toward what JC is offering.
The soft right of the LP would once have only offered more of the Tory message but with softer words but they actually appear to have nothing to offer currently. Belief in the so called 'hard choices' that had to be taken is dying and people are seeing that the choice of so called austerity is only the choice that has to be taken if you believe in neo-liberal capitalism.
From the day Corbyn said that the LPs quest was for a decent and better society and talked about the hope of so many for a different Britain, a better Britain, a more equal Britain, a more decent Britain he allowed them to believe that being fed up with the inequality, the injustice and the unnecessary poverty was a legitimate feeling something the Tories had tended to make fun of for decades.
Some began to feel hope that this far-right view of the economy which feeds the rich and kills the poor could be different. The Jeremy Corbyn Labour Party may not have all the right answers but enough people now believe that the rhetoric of the right is just that. There are no hard and fast rule about their sort of economy - it is what they have chosen and this is certainly moving the centre ground.