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Anne Robert Jacques Turgot

Anne Robert Jacques Turgot, Baron de l'Aulne[a] (/tʊərˈɡ/ toor-GOH; French: [tyʁgo]; 10 May 1727 – 18 March 1781), commonly known as Turgot, was a French economist and statesman. Sometimes considered a physiocrat,[2] he is today best remembered as an early advocate for economic liberalism.[3] He is thought to have been the first political economist to have postulated something like the law of diminishing marginal returns in agriculture.[4]

Anne Robert Jacques Turgot
Portrait of Turgot by Antoine Graincourt, now in Versailles
First Minister of State
In office
24 August 1774 – 12 May 1776
MonarchLouis XVI
Preceded byRené Nicolas de Maupeou
Succeeded byThe Count of Maurepas
Controller-General of Finances
In office
24 August 1774 – 12 May 1776
MonarchLouis XVI
Preceded byJoseph Marie Terray
Succeeded byBaron de Nuits
Secretaries of State for the Navy
In office
20 July 1774 – 24 August 1774
MonarchLouis XVI
Preceded byMarquis de Boynes
Succeeded byAntoine de Sartine
Personal details
Born(1727-05-10)10 May 1727
Paris, France
Died18 March 1781(1781-03-18) (aged 53)
Paris, France
influencedCondorcet · Maistre · Rothbard · Schumpeter · Smith · Marx · Keynes
Signature
Academic career
FieldPolitical economics
School or
tradition
Physiocrats
Alma materSorbonne
InfluencesMontesquieu · Quesnay
Arms of Baron Turgot: Ermine fretty of ten pieces gules, nailed or[1]

Education edit

Born in Paris, Turgot was the youngest son of Michel-Étienne Turgot, "provost of the merchants" of Paris, and Madeleine Francoise Martineau de Brétignolles, and came from an old Norman family.[5] As one of four children, he had a younger sister and two older brothers, one of whom, Étienne-François Turgot (1721–1789), was a naturalist, and served as administrator of Malta and governor of French Guiana. Anne Robert Jacques was educated for the Church, and at the Sorbonne, to which he was admitted in 1749 (being then styled abbé de Brucourt). He delivered two remarkable Latin dissertations, On the Benefits which the Christian Religion has conferred on Mankind, and On the Historical Progress of the Human Mind.[6] In 1750 he decided not to take holy orders, giving as his reason that "he could not bear to wear a mask all his life."[7]

The first sign of Turgot's interest in economics is a letter (1749) on paper money, written to his fellow-student the abbé de Cicé, refuting the abbé Jean Terrasson's defence of John Law's system. He was fond of verse-making, and tried to introduce into French verse the rules of Latin prosody, his translation of the fourth book of the Aeneid into classical hexameter verses being greeted by Voltaire as "the only prose translation in which he had found any enthusiasm."[6]

Idea of progress edit

The first complete statement of the Idea of Progress is that of Turgot, in his "A Philosophical Review of the Successive Advances of the Human Mind" (1750). For Turgot progress covers not simply the arts and sciences but, on their base, the whole of culture – manner, mores, institutions, legal codes, economy, and society.[8]

Early appointments edit

In 1752, he became substitut, and later conseiller in the parlement of Paris, and in 1753 maître des requêtes. In 1754 he was a member of the chambre royale which sat during an exile of the parlement. In Paris he frequented the salons, especially those of Mme de Graffigny – whose niece, Mlle de Ligniville ("Minette"), later Mme Helvétius, he is supposed at one time to have wished to marry; they remained lifelong friends – Mme Geoffrin, Mme du Deffand, Mlle de Lespinasse and the Duchesse d'Enville. It was during this period that he met the leaders of the "physiocratic" school, Quesnay and Vincent de Gournay, and with them Dupont de Nemours, the abbé Morellet and other economists.[6]

In 1743 and 1756, he accompanied Gournay, the intendant of commerce, during Gournay's tours of inspection in the provinces. (Gournay's bye-word on the government's proper involvement in the economy – "laisser faire, laisser passer" – would pass into the vocabulary of economics.) In 1760, while travelling in the east of France and Switzerland, he visited Voltaire, who became one of his chief friends and supporters. All this time he was studying various branches of science, and languages both ancient and modern. In 1753 he translated the Questions sur le commerce from the English of Josias Tucker, and in 1754 he wrote his Lettre sur la tolérance civile, and a pamphlet, Le Conciliateur, in support of religious tolerance. Between 1755 and 1756 he composed various articles for the Encyclopédie,[9] and between 1757 and 1760 an article on Valeurs des monnaies, probably for the Dictionnaire du commerce of the abbé Morellet.[6] In 1759 appeared his work Eloge de Gournay.[10]

Intendant of Limoges, 1761–1774 edit

 
Turgot (by Tardieu)

In August 1761, Turgot was appointed intendant (tax collector) of the genéralité of Limoges, which included some of the poorest and most over-taxed parts of France; here he remained for thirteen years. He was already deeply imbued with the theories of Quesnay and Gournay, and set to work to apply them as far as possible in his province. His first plan was to continue the work, already initiated by his predecessor Tourny, of making a fresh survey of the land (cadastre), in order to arrive at a more just assessment of the taille; he also obtained a large reduction in the contribution of the province. He published his Avis sur l'assiette et la repartition de la taille (1762–1770), and as president of the Société d'agriculture de Limoges offered prizes for essays on the principles of taxation. Quesnay and Mirabeau had advocated a proportional tax (impôt de quotité),[11] but Turgot proposed a distributive tax (impôt de repartition). Another reform was the substitution for the corvée of a tax in money levied on the whole province, the construction of roads being handed over to contractors, by which means Turgot was able to leave his province with a good system of highways, while distributing more justly the expense of their construction.[6]

In 1769, he wrote his Mémoire sur les prêts à intérêt, on the occasion of a scandalous financial crisis at Angoulême, the particular interest of which is that in it the question of lending money at interest was for the first time treated scientifically, and not merely from the ecclesiastical point of view. Turgot's opinion was that a compromise had to be reached between both methods. Among other works written during Turgot's intendancy were the Mémoire sur les mines et carrières, and the Mémoire sur la marque des fers, in which he protested against state regulation and interference and advocated free competition. At the same time he did much to encourage agriculture and local industries, among others establishing the manufacture of porcelain at Limoges. During the famine of 1770–1771 he enforced on landowners "the obligation of relieving the poor" and especially the métayers (sharecroppers) dependent upon them, and organized in every province ateliers and bureaux de charité for providing work for the able-bodied and relief for the infirm, while at the same time he condemned indiscriminate charity. Turgot always made the curés the agents of his charities and reforms when possible. It was in 1770 that he wrote his famous Lettres sur la liberté du commerce des grains, addressed to the controller-general, the abbé Terray. Three of these letters have disappeared, having been sent to Louis XVI by Turgot at a later date and never recovered, but those remaining argue that free trade in grain is in the interest of landowner, farmer and consumer alike, and in forcible terms demand the removal of all restrictions.[6]

Réflexions edit

Turgot's best known work, Reflections on the Formation and Distribution of Wealth,[12] was written early in the period of his intendancy, ostensibly for the benefit of two young Chinese scholars who had studied in Paris, Louis Ko (Gao Leisi, 1732–1790) and Étienne Yang (Yang Dewang, 1733–98), on the occasion of their return to China.[13][14] Written in 1766, it appeared in 1769–1770 in Dupont's journal, the Ephémérides du citoyen, and was published separately in 1776. Dupont, however, made various alterations in the text, in order to bring it more into accordance with Quesnay's doctrines, which led to a coolness between him and Turgot.[6][15]

In the Réflexions, after tracing the origin of commerce, Turgot develops Quesnay's theory that land is the only source of wealth, and divides society into three classes, the productive or agricultural, the salaried (the classe stipendiée) or artisan class, and the land-owning class (classe disponible). He also proposes a notable theory of the interest rate. After discussing the evolution of the different systems of cultivation, the nature of exchange and barter, money, and the functions of capital, he sets forth the theory of the impôt unique, i.e. that only the net product (produit net) of the land should be taxed. In addition he demanded the complete freedom of commerce and industry.[6]

As minister, 1774–1776 edit

Appointment edit

 
Statue of Turgot at the Hôtel de Ville, Paris

Turgot was summoned to the ministry of Louis XVI two months after his accession, and was appointed a month later as Controller-General of Finance. The king even defended the middle-class economist against the reaction of the aristocracy.[16] Turgot owed his appointment as minister of the navy in July 1774 to Maurepas, the "Mentor" of Louis XVI, to whom he was warmly recommended by the abbé Very, a mutual friend. His appointment met with general approval, and was hailed with enthusiasm by the philosophes. A month later (24 August) he was appointed Controller-General of Finances.

On government spending edit

His first act was to submit to the king a statement of his guiding principles: "No bankruptcy, no increase of taxation, no borrowing." Turgot's policy, in face of the desperate financial position, was to enforce the most rigid economy in all departments. All departmental expenses were to be submitted for the approval of the controller-general, a number of sinecures were suppressed, the holders of them being compensated, and the abuse of the acquits au comptant was attacked, while Turgot appealed personally to the king against the lavish giving of places and pensions. He also contemplated a thorough-going reform of the Ferme Générale, but contented himself, as a beginning, with imposing certain conditions on the leases as they were renewed – such as a more efficient personnel, and the abolition for the future of the abuse of the croupes (the name given to a class of pensions), a reform which Terray had shirked on finding how many persons in high places were interested in them, and annulling certain leases, such as those of the manufacture of gunpowder and the administration of the royal mails, the former of which was handed over to a company with the scientist Lavoisier as one of its advisers, and the latter superseded by a quicker and more comfortable service of diligences which were nicknamed "turgotines".

Turgot also prepared a regular budget. His measures succeeded in considerably reducing the deficit, and raised the national credit to such an extent that in 1776, just before his fall, he was able to negotiate a loan with some Dutch bankers at 4%; but the deficit was still so large as to prevent him from attempting at once to realize his favourite scheme of substituting for indirect taxation a single tax on land. Turgot suppressed, however, a number of octrois and minor duties,[b] and opposed, on grounds of economy, the involvement of France in the American Revolutionary War, though without success.[6]

On free trade edit

Turgot at once set to work to establish free trade in grain, but his edict, which was signed on 13 September 1774, met with strong opposition even in the conseil du roi. A striking feature was the preamble, setting forth the doctrines on which the edict was based, which won the praise of the philosophes and the ridicule of the wits; this Turgot rewrote three times, it is said, in order to make it "so clear that any village judge could explain it to the peasants." The opposition to the edict was strong. Turgot was hated by those who had been interested in the speculations in grain under the regime of the abbé Terray, among whom were included some of the princes of the blood. Moreover, the commerce des blés had been a favourite topic of the salons for some years past, and the witty Galiani, the opponent of the physiocrats, had a large following. The opposition was now continued by Linguet and by Necker, who in 1775 published his Essai sur la législation et le commerce des grains.

Suppression of Dijon bread riots edit

Turgot's biggest challenge was the poor harvest of 1774, which led to a noticeable rise in the price of bread in the winter and early spring of 1774–1775. In April and early May, when peasants begged the governor of Dijon for bread, he uttered those famous words that would later be recalled during the French Revolution: "The grass has sprouted, go to the fields and browse on it." Houses of the wealthy were seized and occupied, flour-mills were destroyed, and furniture was smashed. Those extraordinary bread-riots are known as the guerre des farines, which ominously predicted the coming French Revolution. Turgot showed great firmness and decision in repressing the riots, but also some caution in using soldiers, as he had said that "every levy of soldiers led to a riot." In this, he even had conflict with the royalty, as Louis XVI wanted to go out onto the balcony and meet the crowds, to say that there would be a reduction in the price of bread, but Turgot admonished him against this, and the bread remained at high prices.[17] His position was strengthened by the entry of Malesherbes into the ministry (July 1775).[6]

On feudal obligations and protections edit

All this time Turgot had been preparing his famous Six Edicts, which were finally presented to the conseil du roi (January 1776). Peter Kropotkin described these edicts as "very modest proposals" and summarized these as "abolition of statute labor, abolition of trade-wardens and a timid attempt to make the two privileged classes – the nobility and clergy – pay some of the taxes."[18] Of the six edicts four were of minor importance, but the two which met with violent opposition were, firstly, the edict suppressing the corvées, and secondly, that suppressing the jurandes and maîtrises, by which the craft guilds maintained their privileges. In the preamble to the former Turgot boldly announced as his object the abolition of privilege, and the subjection of all three Estates of the realm to taxation; the clergy were afterwards excepted, at the request of Maurepas.

In the preamble to the edict on the jurandes Turgot laid down as a principle the right of every man to work without restriction.[c] He obtained the registration of the edicts by the lit de justice of 12 March, but by that time he had nearly everybody against him. His attacks on privilege had won him the hatred of the nobles and the parlements; his attempted reforms in the royal household, that of the court; his free trade legislation, that of the financiers; his views on tolerance and his agitation for the suppression of the phrase that was offensive to Protestants in the king's coronation oath, that of the clergy; and his edict on the jurandes, that of the rich bourgeoisie of Paris and others, such as the prince de Conti, whose interests were involved. The queen disliked him for opposing the grant of favours to her protégés, and he had offended Mme. de Polignac in a similar manner.[6] The queen played a key role in his disgrace later.[19]

Proposals for a representative government edit

With the physiocrats, he believed in an enlightened political absolutism, and looked to the king to carry through all reforms. As to the parlements, he opposed all interference on their part in legislation, considering that they had no competency outside the sphere of justice. He recognized the danger of the recap of the old parlement, but was unable effectively to oppose it since he had been associated with the dismissal of Maupeou and Terray, and seems to have underestimated its power. He was opposed to the summoning of the states-general advocated by Malesherbes (6 May 1775), possibly on the ground that the two privileged orders would have too much power in them. His own plan is to be found in his Mémoire sur les municipalités, which was submitted informally to the king.

In Turgot's proposed system, landed proprietors alone were to form the electorate, no distinction being made among the three orders; the members of the town and country municipalités were to elect representatives for the district municipalités, which in turn would elect to the provincial municipalités, and the latter to a grande municipalité, which should have no legislative powers, but should concern itself entirely with the administration of taxation. With this was to be combined a whole system of education, relief of the poor, and other activities. Louis XVI recoiled from this as being too great a leap in the dark, and such a fundamental difference of opinion between king and minister was bound to lead to a breach sooner or later.[20] Turgot's only choice, however, was between "tinkering" at the existing system in detail and a complete revolution, and his attack on privilege, which might have been carried through by a popular minister and a strong king, was bound to form part of any effective scheme of reform.[6]

American Revolution edit

As minister of the navy from 1774 to 1776, Turgot opposed financial support for the American Revolution. He believed in the virtue and inevitable success of the revolution but warned that France could neither financially nor socially afford to overtly aid it. French intellectuals saw America as the hope of mankind and magnified American virtues to demonstrate the validity of their ideals along with seeing a chance to avenge their defeat in the Seven Years' War. Turgot, however, emphasized what he believed were American inadequacies. He complained that the new American state constitutions failed to adopt the physiocratic principle of distinguishing for purposes of taxation between those who owned land and those who did not, the principle of direct taxation of property holders had not been followed, and a complicated legal and administrative structure had been created to regulate commerce. On the social level, Turgot and his progressive contemporaries suffered further disappointment: a religious oath was required of elected officials and slavery was not abolished. Turgot died in 1781 before the conclusion of the war. Although disappointed, Turgot never doubted revolutionary victory.[21]

Place in the Ministry edit

All might yet have gone well if Turgot could have retained the confidence of the king, but the king could not fail to see that Turgot had not the support of the other ministers. Even his friend Malesherbes thought he was too rash, and was, moreover, himself discouraged and wished to resign. The alienation of Maurepas was also increasing. Whether through jealousy of the ascendancy which Turgot had acquired over the king, or through the natural incompatibility of their characters, he was already inclined to take sides against Turgot, and the reconciliation between him and the queen, which took place about this time, meant that he was henceforth the tool of the Polignac clique and the Choiseul party. About this time, too, appeared a pamphlet, Le Songe de M. Maurepas, generally ascribed to the comte de Provence (Louis XVIII), containing a bitter caricature of Turgot.[6]

 
Turgot after a portrait by Charles-Nicolas Cochin

Fall edit

The immediate cause of Turgot's fall is uncertain. Some speak of a plot, of forged letters containing attacks on the queen shown to the king as Turgot's, of a series of notes on Turgot's budget prepared, it is said, by Necker, and shown to the king to prove his incapacity. Others attribute it to the queen, and there is no doubt that she hated Turgot for supporting Vergennes in demanding the recall of the comte de Guînes, the ambassador in London, whose cause she had ardently espoused at the prompting of the Choiseul clique. Others attribute it to an intrigue of Maurepas. On the resignation of Malesherbes (April 1776), whom Turgot wished to replace by the abbé Very, Maurepas proposed to the king as his successor a nonentity named Amelot.

Turgot, on hearing of this, wrote an indignant letter to the king, in which he reproached him for refusing to see him, pointed out in strong terms the dangers of a weak ministry and a weak king, and complained bitterly of Maurepas's irresolution and subjection to court intrigues; this letter the king, though asked to treat it as confidential, is said to have shown to Maurepas, whose dislike for Turgot it still further embittered. With all these enemies, Turgot's fall was certain, but he wished to stay in office long enough to finish his project for the reform of the royal household before resigning. To his dismay, he was not allowed to do that. On 12 May 1776 he was ordered to send in his resignation. He at once retired to La Roche-Guyon, the château of the Duchesse d'Enville, returning shortly to Paris, where he spent the rest of his life in scientific and literary studies, being made vice-president of the Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres in 1777.[6]

Commentary on Turgot edit

According to the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition:

In character Turgot was simple, honourable and upright, with a passion for justice and truth. He was an idealist, his enemies would say a doctrinaire, and certainly the terms "natural rights," "natural law," frequently occur in his writings. His friends speak of his charm and gaiety in intimate intercourse, but among strangers he was silent and awkward, and produced the impression of being reserved and disdainful. On one point both friends and enemies agree, and that is his brusquerie and his lack of tact in the management of men; August Oncken [de] points out with some reason the schoolmasterish tone of his letters, even to the king. As a statesman he has been very variously estimated, but it is generally agreed that a large number of the reforms and ideas of the Revolution were due to him; the ideas did not as a rule originate with him, but it was he who first gave them prominence. As to his position as an economist, opinion is also divided. Oncken, to take the extreme of condemnation, looks upon him as a bad physiocrat and a confused thinker, while Leon Say considers that he was the founder of modern political economy, and that "though he failed in the 18th century he triumphed in the 19th."[6]

Andrew Dickson White wrote in Seven Great Statesmen in the Warfare of Humanity with Unreason (1915):

TURGOT...I present today one of the three greatest statesmen who fought unreason in France between the close of the Middle Ages and the outbreak of the French Revolution – Louis XI and Richelieu being the two other. And not only this: were you to count the greatest men of the modern world upon your fingers, he would be of the number – a great thinker, writer, administrator, philanthropist, statesman, and above all, a great character and a great man. And yet, judged by ordinary standards, a failure. For he was thrown out of his culminating position, as Comptroller-General of France, after serving but twenty months, and then lived only long enough to see every leading measure to which he had devoted his life deliberately and malignantly undone; the flagrant abuses which he had abolished restored, apparently forever; the highways to national prosperity, peace, and influence, which he had opened, destroyed; and his country put under full headway toward the greatest catastrophe the modern world has seen.

He now, in 1749, at the age of twenty two, wrote... a letter which has been an object of wonder among political thinkers ever since. Its subject was paper money. Discussing the ideas of John Law, and especially the essay of Terrasson which had supported them, he dissected them mercilessly, but in a way useful not only in those times but in these. ...As regards currency inflation ... It still remains one of the best presentations of this subject ever made; and what adds to our wonder is that it was not the result of a study of authorities, but was worked out wholly from his own observation and thought. Up to this time there were no authorities and no received doctrine on the subject; there were simply records of financial practice more or less vicious; it was reserved for this young student, in a letter not intended for publication, to lay down for the first time the great law in which the modern world, after all its puzzling and costly experiences, has found safety.

Notes edit

  1. ^ Also spelled "de Laune" or "de Launes".
  2. ^ For an account of Turgot's financial administration, see Ch. Gomel, Causes financiéres, vol. 1.
  3. ^ Turgot was opposed to all labour associations of employers or employed, in accordance with his belief in free competition.

References edit

  1. ^ Bulletin de la Société d'émulation du Bourbonnais (in French). Moulins: Société d'émulation du Bourbonnais. 1920. p. 291. Retrieved 16 September 2017. d'hermine, treillissé de gueules de dix pièces turgot.
  2. ^ Vardi, Lianne (2012). The Physiocrats and the World of the Enlightenment. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 1–2. ISBN 9781107021198. from the original on 3 June 2021. Retrieved 5 March 2020. William Doyle uses physiocracy to explain the freeing of the grain trade and treats Turgot as a physiocrat. [...] Jessica Riskin does the same [...]
  3. ^ Vardi, Lianne (2012). The Physiocrats and the World of the Enlightenment. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 9–10. ISBN 9781107021198. from the original on 3 June 2021. Retrieved 15 October 2020.
  4. ^ "Anne-Robert-Jacques Turgot (1727–1781)", The Concise Encyclopedia of Economics, Library of Economics and Liberty (2nd ed.), Liberty Fund, 2008, from the original on 2 December 2019, retrieved 16 July 2013
  5. ^ Turgot is a Norman surname, former first name (Old Norse: Thorgaut) Norman family names of Viking origin 19 February 2020 at the Wayback Machine Surname localization in France 17 May 2019 at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o   One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Turgot, Anne Robert Jacques". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 27 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 415–17.
  7. ^ H. Packwood Adams (1914), The French revolution, McClurg, p. 31, from the original on 2 July 2014, retrieved 13 March 2016
  8. ^ Robert Nisbet, History of the Idea of Progress (1980) ch 5
  9. ^ "Fairs and markets" and "Fondations"
  10. ^ Kafker, Frank A.; Chouillet, Jacques (26 July 1990). "Notices sur les auteurs des 17 volumes de « discours » de l'Encyclopédie (suite et fin)". Recherches sur Diderot et sur l'Encyclopédie. 8 (1): 101–121. from the original on 24 September 2015. Retrieved 26 July 2021 – via www.persee.fr.
  11. ^ "The impôt de quotité is the result of the application of a tax where the result cannot be calculated in advance.
  12. ^ "Reflections on the Formation and Distribution of Wealth". from the original on 8 August 2017. Retrieved 17 May 2006.
  13. ^ Me Nguyen; Benoît Malbranque (25 May 2014). "Les Chinois de Turgot". Institute Coppet.
  14. ^ The literary device adopted by Turgot allows for the presentation of the subject from the ground up, without appearing to undervalue the reader's intelligence. Compare the Persian Letters of Montesquieu, with their solemn explication of European customs to an outsider, in Montesquieu a vehicle for satire.
  15. ^ Peter D. Groenewegen (2002), Eighteenth-century Economics: Turgot, Beccaria and Smith and Their Contemporaries, Psychology Press, p. 265, ISBN 9780203458785, from the original on 2 July 2014, retrieved 13 March 2016
  16. ^ Peter Kropotkin (1909). "Chapter 5". The Great French Revolution, 1789–1793. Translated by N. F. Dryhurst. New York: Vanguard Printings.
  17. ^ Peter Kropotkin (1909). "Chapter 5". The Great French Revolution, 1789–1793. Translated by N. F. Dryhurst. New York: Vanguard Printings. Louis XVI, wanted to go out on the balcony of the palace to speak to them, to tell them that he would reduce the price of bread; but Turgot, like a true economist, opposed this. The reduction in the price of bread was not made.
  18. ^ Peter Kropotkin (1909). "Chapter 6". The Great French Revolution, 1789–1793. Translated by N. F. Dryhurst. New York: Vanguard Printings.
  19. ^ Fraser 2006, p. 250
  20. ^ Peter Kropotkin (1909). "Chapter 5". The Great French Revolution, 1789–1793. Translated by N. F. Dryhurst. New York: Vanguard Printings. "Representative Government," such as was established by the English after their revolution, and was advocated in the writings of the contemporary philosophers, also began to be spoken of. With this end in view, Turgot had even prepared a scheme of provincial assemblies, to be followed later on by representative government for all France in which the propertied classes would have been called upon to constitute a parliament. Louis XVI shrank from this proposal, and dismissed Turgot; but from that moment all educated France began to talk of a Constitution and national representation.
  21. ^ Wendell (1979)

Further reading edit

  • Brewer, Anthony (1987), "Turgot: Founder of Classical Economics", Economica, 54 (216): 417–28, doi:10.2307/2554177, JSTOR 2554177.
  • Dakin, Douglas (1939), Turgot and the Ancien Régime in France, London: Methuen.
  • Fraser, Antonia (2006). Marie Antoinette: the journey. [Toronto]: Anchor Canada. ISBN 9780385662871..
  • Groenewegen, Peter D. (2002), Eighteenth-Century Economics: Turgot, Beccaria and Smith and their Contemporaries, London: Routledge, ISBN 0415279402.
  • Hart, David (2008). "Turgot, Anne-Robert-Jacques (1727–1781)". In Hamowy, Ronald (ed.). The Encyclopedia of Libertarianism. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage; Cato Institute. pp. 515–16. doi:10.4135/9781412965811.n315. ISBN 978-1412965804. LCCN 2008009151. OCLC 750831024.
  • Kaplan, Steven L. (1976), Bread, Politics and Political Economy in the Reign of Louis XV, The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff, ISBN 9024718732.
  • Lifschitz, Avi (2004), "Language as the Key to the Epistemological Labyrinth: Turgot's Changing View of Human Perception" (PDF), Historiographia Linguistica, 31 (2/3): 345–65, doi:10.1075/hl.31.2.07lif
  • Meek, Ronald L. (1976), Social Science and the Ignoble Savage, New York: Cambridge University Press, ISBN 0521209692.
  • Palmer, R. R. (1976), "Turgot, Paragon of the Continental Enlightenment", Journal of Law and Economics, 19 (3): 607–19, doi:10.1086/466889, S2CID 154818247.
  • Rothbard, Murray N. (1999). "Chapter 3. A.R.J. Turgot: Brief, Lucid, and Brilliant" (PDF). In Holcombe, Randall G. (ed.). The Great Austrian Economists. Auburn, Alabama: Ludwig von Mises Institute. ISBN 0945466048.
  • Tellier, Luc-Normand, Face aux Colbert : les Le Tellier, Vauban, Turgot ... et l'avènement du libéralisme, Presses de l'Université du Québec, 1987, 816 pages. Etext
  • Turgot (baron de l'Aulne), Anne-Robert-Jacques (2011), The Turgot Collection: Writings, Speeches, and Letters of Anne Robert Jacques Turgot, Baron de Laune, Ludwig von Mises Institute, p. 560, ISBN 9781933550947.
  • Wendel, Jacques M. (1979), "Turgot and the American Revolution", Modern Age, 23 (3): 282–89.

External links edit

  • Andrew Dickson White's Seven Great Statesmen in the Warfare of Humanity with Unreason (1915) at Wikiquote
  • Turgot Page 4 February 2017 at the Wayback Machine at McMaster
  • Jacques Turgot at Catholic Encyclopedia
  • Turgot on progress and political economy
  • Notice Biographique by Paulette Taïeb.
  • 12 mai 1776: "Renvoi de Turgot" by Hérodote
  • The Institut Turgot in Paris
  • Turgot & 18th and 19th century Dutch economics and politics
  • The Brilliance of Turgot by Murray N. Rothbard.
  • Works by Anne Robert Jacques Turgot at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
Political offices
Preceded by Secretaries of State for the Navy
20 July 1774 – 24 August 1774
Succeeded by
Preceded by Controllers-General of Finances
24 August 1774 – 12 May 1776
Succeeded by
Jean Étienne Bernard Clugny de Nuits

anne, robert, jacques, turgot, baron, aulne, ʊər, toor, french, tyʁgo, 1727, march, 1781, commonly, known, turgot, french, economist, statesman, sometimes, considered, physiocrat, today, best, remembered, early, advocate, economic, liberalism, thought, have, b. Anne Robert Jacques Turgot Baron de l Aulne a t ʊer ˈ ɡ oʊ toor GOH French tyʁgo 10 May 1727 18 March 1781 commonly known as Turgot was a French economist and statesman Sometimes considered a physiocrat 2 he is today best remembered as an early advocate for economic liberalism 3 He is thought to have been the first political economist to have postulated something like the law of diminishing marginal returns in agriculture 4 Anne Robert Jacques TurgotPortrait of Turgot by Antoine Graincourt now in VersaillesFirst Minister of StateIn office 24 August 1774 12 May 1776MonarchLouis XVIPreceded byRene Nicolas de MaupeouSucceeded byThe Count of MaurepasController General of FinancesIn office 24 August 1774 12 May 1776MonarchLouis XVIPreceded byJoseph Marie TerraySucceeded byBaron de NuitsSecretaries of State for the NavyIn office 20 July 1774 24 August 1774MonarchLouis XVIPreceded byMarquis de BoynesSucceeded byAntoine de SartinePersonal detailsBorn 1727 05 10 10 May 1727Paris FranceDied18 March 1781 1781 03 18 aged 53 Paris FranceinfluencedCondorcet Maistre Rothbard Schumpeter Smith Marx KeynesSignatureAcademic careerFieldPolitical economicsSchool ortraditionPhysiocratsAlma materSorbonneInfluencesMontesquieu QuesnayArms of Baron Turgot Ermine fretty of ten pieces gules nailed or 1 Contents 1 Education 2 Idea of progress 3 Early appointments 4 Intendant of Limoges 1761 1774 5 Reflexions 6 As minister 1774 1776 6 1 Appointment 6 2 On government spending 6 3 On free trade 6 4 Suppression of Dijon bread riots 6 5 On feudal obligations and protections 6 6 Proposals for a representative government 6 7 American Revolution 6 8 Place in the Ministry 7 Fall 8 Commentary on Turgot 9 Notes 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksEducation editBorn in Paris Turgot was the youngest son of Michel Etienne Turgot provost of the merchants of Paris and Madeleine Francoise Martineau de Bretignolles and came from an old Norman family 5 As one of four children he had a younger sister and two older brothers one of whom Etienne Francois Turgot 1721 1789 was a naturalist and served as administrator of Malta and governor of French Guiana Anne Robert Jacques was educated for the Church and at the Sorbonne to which he was admitted in 1749 being then styled abbe de Brucourt He delivered two remarkable Latin dissertations On the Benefits which the Christian Religion has conferred on Mankind and On the Historical Progress of the Human Mind 6 In 1750 he decided not to take holy orders giving as his reason that he could not bear to wear a mask all his life 7 The first sign of Turgot s interest in economics is a letter 1749 on paper money written to his fellow student the abbe de Cice refuting the abbe Jean Terrasson s defence of John Law s system He was fond of verse making and tried to introduce into French verse the rules of Latin prosody his translation of the fourth book of the Aeneid into classical hexameter verses being greeted by Voltaire as the only prose translation in which he had found any enthusiasm 6 Idea of progress editThe first complete statement of the Idea of Progress is that of Turgot in his A Philosophical Review of the Successive Advances of the Human Mind 1750 For Turgot progress covers not simply the arts and sciences but on their base the whole of culture manner mores institutions legal codes economy and society 8 Early appointments editIn 1752 he became substitut and later conseiller in the parlement of Paris and in 1753 maitre des requetes In 1754 he was a member of the chambre royale which sat during an exile of the parlement In Paris he frequented the salons especially those of Mme de Graffigny whose niece Mlle de Ligniville Minette later Mme Helvetius he is supposed at one time to have wished to marry they remained lifelong friends Mme Geoffrin Mme du Deffand Mlle de Lespinasse and the Duchesse d Enville It was during this period that he met the leaders of the physiocratic school Quesnay and Vincent de Gournay and with them Dupont de Nemours the abbe Morellet and other economists 6 In 1743 and 1756 he accompanied Gournay the intendant of commerce during Gournay s tours of inspection in the provinces Gournay s bye word on the government s proper involvement in the economy laisser faire laisser passer would pass into the vocabulary of economics In 1760 while travelling in the east of France and Switzerland he visited Voltaire who became one of his chief friends and supporters All this time he was studying various branches of science and languages both ancient and modern In 1753 he translated the Questions sur le commerce from the English of Josias Tucker and in 1754 he wrote his Lettre sur la tolerance civile and a pamphlet Le Conciliateur in support of religious tolerance Between 1755 and 1756 he composed various articles for the Encyclopedie 9 and between 1757 and 1760 an article on Valeurs des monnaies probably for the Dictionnaire du commerce of the abbe Morellet 6 In 1759 appeared his work Eloge de Gournay 10 Intendant of Limoges 1761 1774 edit nbsp Turgot by Tardieu In August 1761 Turgot was appointed intendant tax collector of the generalite of Limoges which included some of the poorest and most over taxed parts of France here he remained for thirteen years He was already deeply imbued with the theories of Quesnay and Gournay and set to work to apply them as far as possible in his province His first plan was to continue the work already initiated by his predecessor Tourny of making a fresh survey of the land cadastre in order to arrive at a more just assessment of the taille he also obtained a large reduction in the contribution of the province He published his Avis sur l assiette et la repartition de la taille 1762 1770 and as president of the Societe d agriculture de Limoges offered prizes for essays on the principles of taxation Quesnay and Mirabeau had advocated a proportional tax impot de quotite 11 but Turgot proposed a distributive tax impot de repartition Another reform was the substitution for the corvee of a tax in money levied on the whole province the construction of roads being handed over to contractors by which means Turgot was able to leave his province with a good system of highways while distributing more justly the expense of their construction 6 In 1769 he wrote his Memoire sur les prets a interet on the occasion of a scandalous financial crisis at Angouleme the particular interest of which is that in it the question of lending money at interest was for the first time treated scientifically and not merely from the ecclesiastical point of view Turgot s opinion was that a compromise had to be reached between both methods Among other works written during Turgot s intendancy were the Memoire sur les mines et carrieres and the Memoire sur la marque des fers in which he protested against state regulation and interference and advocated free competition At the same time he did much to encourage agriculture and local industries among others establishing the manufacture of porcelain at Limoges During the famine of 1770 1771 he enforced on landowners the obligation of relieving the poor and especially the metayers sharecroppers dependent upon them and organized in every province ateliers and bureaux de charite for providing work for the able bodied and relief for the infirm while at the same time he condemned indiscriminate charity Turgot always made the cures the agents of his charities and reforms when possible It was in 1770 that he wrote his famous Lettres sur la liberte du commerce des grains addressed to the controller general the abbe Terray Three of these letters have disappeared having been sent to Louis XVI by Turgot at a later date and never recovered but those remaining argue that free trade in grain is in the interest of landowner farmer and consumer alike and in forcible terms demand the removal of all restrictions 6 Reflexions edit nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article Reflections on the Formation and the Distribution of RichesTurgot s best known work Reflections on the Formation and Distribution of Wealth 12 was written early in the period of his intendancy ostensibly for the benefit of two young Chinese scholars who had studied in Paris Louis Ko Gao Leisi 1732 1790 and Etienne Yang Yang Dewang 1733 98 on the occasion of their return to China 13 14 Written in 1766 it appeared in 1769 1770 in Dupont s journal the Ephemerides du citoyen and was published separately in 1776 Dupont however made various alterations in the text in order to bring it more into accordance with Quesnay s doctrines which led to a coolness between him and Turgot 6 15 In the Reflexions after tracing the origin of commerce Turgot develops Quesnay s theory that land is the only source of wealth and divides society into three classes the productive or agricultural the salaried the classe stipendiee or artisan class and the land owning class classe disponible He also proposes a notable theory of the interest rate After discussing the evolution of the different systems of cultivation the nature of exchange and barter money and the functions of capital he sets forth the theory of the impot unique i e that only the net product produit net of the land should be taxed In addition he demanded the complete freedom of commerce and industry 6 As minister 1774 1776 editAppointment edit nbsp Statue of Turgot at the Hotel de Ville ParisTurgot was summoned to the ministry of Louis XVI two months after his accession and was appointed a month later as Controller General of Finance The king even defended the middle class economist against the reaction of the aristocracy 16 Turgot owed his appointment as minister of the navy in July 1774 to Maurepas the Mentor of Louis XVI to whom he was warmly recommended by the abbe Very a mutual friend His appointment met with general approval and was hailed with enthusiasm by the philosophes A month later 24 August he was appointed Controller General of Finances On government spending edit His first act was to submit to the king a statement of his guiding principles No bankruptcy no increase of taxation no borrowing Turgot s policy in face of the desperate financial position was to enforce the most rigid economy in all departments All departmental expenses were to be submitted for the approval of the controller general a number of sinecures were suppressed the holders of them being compensated and the abuse of the acquits au comptant was attacked while Turgot appealed personally to the king against the lavish giving of places and pensions He also contemplated a thorough going reform of the Ferme Generale but contented himself as a beginning with imposing certain conditions on the leases as they were renewed such as a more efficient personnel and the abolition for the future of the abuse of the croupes the name given to a class of pensions a reform which Terray had shirked on finding how many persons in high places were interested in them and annulling certain leases such as those of the manufacture of gunpowder and the administration of the royal mails the former of which was handed over to a company with the scientist Lavoisier as one of its advisers and the latter superseded by a quicker and more comfortable service of diligences which were nicknamed turgotines Turgot also prepared a regular budget His measures succeeded in considerably reducing the deficit and raised the national credit to such an extent that in 1776 just before his fall he was able to negotiate a loan with some Dutch bankers at 4 but the deficit was still so large as to prevent him from attempting at once to realize his favourite scheme of substituting for indirect taxation a single tax on land Turgot suppressed however a number of octrois and minor duties b and opposed on grounds of economy the involvement of France in the American Revolutionary War though without success 6 On free trade edit Turgot at once set to work to establish free trade in grain but his edict which was signed on 13 September 1774 met with strong opposition even in the conseil du roi A striking feature was the preamble setting forth the doctrines on which the edict was based which won the praise of the philosophes and the ridicule of the wits this Turgot rewrote three times it is said in order to make it so clear that any village judge could explain it to the peasants The opposition to the edict was strong Turgot was hated by those who had been interested in the speculations in grain under the regime of the abbe Terray among whom were included some of the princes of the blood Moreover the commerce des bles had been a favourite topic of the salons for some years past and the witty Galiani the opponent of the physiocrats had a large following The opposition was now continued by Linguet and by Necker who in 1775 published his Essai sur la legislation et le commerce des grains Suppression of Dijon bread riots edit Turgot s biggest challenge was the poor harvest of 1774 which led to a noticeable rise in the price of bread in the winter and early spring of 1774 1775 In April and early May when peasants begged the governor of Dijon for bread he uttered those famous words that would later be recalled during the French Revolution The grass has sprouted go to the fields and browse on it Houses of the wealthy were seized and occupied flour mills were destroyed and furniture was smashed Those extraordinary bread riots are known as the guerre des farines which ominously predicted the coming French Revolution Turgot showed great firmness and decision in repressing the riots but also some caution in using soldiers as he had said that every levy of soldiers led to a riot In this he even had conflict with the royalty as Louis XVI wanted to go out onto the balcony and meet the crowds to say that there would be a reduction in the price of bread but Turgot admonished him against this and the bread remained at high prices 17 His position was strengthened by the entry of Malesherbes into the ministry July 1775 6 On feudal obligations and protections edit All this time Turgot had been preparing his famous Six Edicts which were finally presented to the conseil du roi January 1776 Peter Kropotkin described these edicts as very modest proposals and summarized these as abolition of statute labor abolition of trade wardens and a timid attempt to make the two privileged classes the nobility and clergy pay some of the taxes 18 Of the six edicts four were of minor importance but the two which met with violent opposition were firstly the edict suppressing the corvees and secondly that suppressing the jurandes and maitrises by which the craft guilds maintained their privileges In the preamble to the former Turgot boldly announced as his object the abolition of privilege and the subjection of all three Estates of the realm to taxation the clergy were afterwards excepted at the request of Maurepas In the preamble to the edict on the jurandes Turgot laid down as a principle the right of every man to work without restriction c He obtained the registration of the edicts by the lit de justice of 12 March but by that time he had nearly everybody against him His attacks on privilege had won him the hatred of the nobles and the parlements his attempted reforms in the royal household that of the court his free trade legislation that of the financiers his views on tolerance and his agitation for the suppression of the phrase that was offensive to Protestants in the king s coronation oath that of the clergy and his edict on the jurandes that of the rich bourgeoisie of Paris and others such as the prince de Conti whose interests were involved The queen disliked him for opposing the grant of favours to her proteges and he had offended Mme de Polignac in a similar manner 6 The queen played a key role in his disgrace later 19 Proposals for a representative government edit With the physiocrats he believed in an enlightened political absolutism and looked to the king to carry through all reforms As to the parlements he opposed all interference on their part in legislation considering that they had no competency outside the sphere of justice He recognized the danger of the recap of the old parlement but was unable effectively to oppose it since he had been associated with the dismissal of Maupeou and Terray and seems to have underestimated its power He was opposed to the summoning of the states general advocated by Malesherbes 6 May 1775 possibly on the ground that the two privileged orders would have too much power in them His own plan is to be found in his Memoire sur les municipalites which was submitted informally to the king In Turgot s proposed system landed proprietors alone were to form the electorate no distinction being made among the three orders the members of the town and country municipalites were to elect representatives for the district municipalites which in turn would elect to the provincial municipalites and the latter to a grande municipalite which should have no legislative powers but should concern itself entirely with the administration of taxation With this was to be combined a whole system of education relief of the poor and other activities Louis XVI recoiled from this as being too great a leap in the dark and such a fundamental difference of opinion between king and minister was bound to lead to a breach sooner or later 20 Turgot s only choice however was between tinkering at the existing system in detail and a complete revolution and his attack on privilege which might have been carried through by a popular minister and a strong king was bound to form part of any effective scheme of reform 6 American Revolution edit As minister of the navy from 1774 to 1776 Turgot opposed financial support for the American Revolution He believed in the virtue and inevitable success of the revolution but warned that France could neither financially nor socially afford to overtly aid it French intellectuals saw America as the hope of mankind and magnified American virtues to demonstrate the validity of their ideals along with seeing a chance to avenge their defeat in the Seven Years War Turgot however emphasized what he believed were American inadequacies He complained that the new American state constitutions failed to adopt the physiocratic principle of distinguishing for purposes of taxation between those who owned land and those who did not the principle of direct taxation of property holders had not been followed and a complicated legal and administrative structure had been created to regulate commerce On the social level Turgot and his progressive contemporaries suffered further disappointment a religious oath was required of elected officials and slavery was not abolished Turgot died in 1781 before the conclusion of the war Although disappointed Turgot never doubted revolutionary victory 21 Place in the Ministry edit All might yet have gone well if Turgot could have retained the confidence of the king but the king could not fail to see that Turgot had not the support of the other ministers Even his friend Malesherbes thought he was too rash and was moreover himself discouraged and wished to resign The alienation of Maurepas was also increasing Whether through jealousy of the ascendancy which Turgot had acquired over the king or through the natural incompatibility of their characters he was already inclined to take sides against Turgot and the reconciliation between him and the queen which took place about this time meant that he was henceforth the tool of the Polignac clique and the Choiseul party About this time too appeared a pamphlet Le Songe de M Maurepas generally ascribed to the comte de Provence Louis XVIII containing a bitter caricature of Turgot 6 nbsp Turgot after a portrait by Charles Nicolas CochinFall editThe immediate cause of Turgot s fall is uncertain Some speak of a plot of forged letters containing attacks on the queen shown to the king as Turgot s of a series of notes on Turgot s budget prepared it is said by Necker and shown to the king to prove his incapacity Others attribute it to the queen and there is no doubt that she hated Turgot for supporting Vergennes in demanding the recall of the comte de Guines the ambassador in London whose cause she had ardently espoused at the prompting of the Choiseul clique Others attribute it to an intrigue of Maurepas On the resignation of Malesherbes April 1776 whom Turgot wished to replace by the abbe Very Maurepas proposed to the king as his successor a nonentity named Amelot Turgot on hearing of this wrote an indignant letter to the king in which he reproached him for refusing to see him pointed out in strong terms the dangers of a weak ministry and a weak king and complained bitterly of Maurepas s irresolution and subjection to court intrigues this letter the king though asked to treat it as confidential is said to have shown to Maurepas whose dislike for Turgot it still further embittered With all these enemies Turgot s fall was certain but he wished to stay in office long enough to finish his project for the reform of the royal household before resigning To his dismay he was not allowed to do that On 12 May 1776 he was ordered to send in his resignation He at once retired to La Roche Guyon the chateau of the Duchesse d Enville returning shortly to Paris where he spent the rest of his life in scientific and literary studies being made vice president of the Academie des Inscriptions et Belles Lettres in 1777 6 Commentary on Turgot editAccording to the Encyclopaedia Britannica Eleventh Edition In character Turgot was simple honourable and upright with a passion for justice and truth He was an idealist his enemies would say a doctrinaire and certainly the terms natural rights natural law frequently occur in his writings His friends speak of his charm and gaiety in intimate intercourse but among strangers he was silent and awkward and produced the impression of being reserved and disdainful On one point both friends and enemies agree and that is his brusquerie and his lack of tact in the management of men August Oncken de points out with some reason the schoolmasterish tone of his letters even to the king As a statesman he has been very variously estimated but it is generally agreed that a large number of the reforms and ideas of the Revolution were due to him the ideas did not as a rule originate with him but it was he who first gave them prominence As to his position as an economist opinion is also divided Oncken to take the extreme of condemnation looks upon him as a bad physiocrat and a confused thinker while Leon Say considers that he was the founder of modern political economy and that though he failed in the 18th century he triumphed in the 19th 6 Andrew Dickson White wrote in Seven Great Statesmen in the Warfare of Humanity with Unreason 1915 TURGOT I present today one of the three greatest statesmen who fought unreason in France between the close of the Middle Ages and the outbreak of the French Revolution Louis XI and Richelieu being the two other And not only this were you to count the greatest men of the modern world upon your fingers he would be of the number a great thinker writer administrator philanthropist statesman and above all a great character and a great man And yet judged by ordinary standards a failure For he was thrown out of his culminating position as Comptroller General of France after serving but twenty months and then lived only long enough to see every leading measure to which he had devoted his life deliberately and malignantly undone the flagrant abuses which he had abolished restored apparently forever the highways to national prosperity peace and influence which he had opened destroyed and his country put under full headway toward the greatest catastrophe the modern world has seen He now in 1749 at the age of twenty two wrote a letter which has been an object of wonder among political thinkers ever since Its subject was paper money Discussing the ideas of John Law and especially the essay of Terrasson which had supported them he dissected them mercilessly but in a way useful not only in those times but in these As regards currency inflation It still remains one of the best presentations of this subject ever made and what adds to our wonder is that it was not the result of a study of authorities but was worked out wholly from his own observation and thought Up to this time there were no authorities and no received doctrine on the subject there were simply records of financial practice more or less vicious it was reserved for this young student in a letter not intended for publication to lay down for the first time the great law in which the modern world after all its puzzling and costly experiences has found safety Notes edit Also spelled de Laune or de Launes For an account of Turgot s financial administration see Ch Gomel Causes financieres vol 1 Turgot was opposed to all labour associations of employers or employed in accordance with his belief in free competition References edit Bulletin de la Societe d emulation du Bourbonnais in French Moulins Societe d emulation du Bourbonnais 1920 p 291 Retrieved 16 September 2017 d hermine treillisse de gueules de dix pieces turgot Vardi Lianne 2012 The Physiocrats and the World of the Enlightenment Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 1 2 ISBN 9781107021198 Archived from the original on 3 June 2021 Retrieved 5 March 2020 William Doyle uses physiocracy to explain the freeing of the grain trade and treats Turgot as a physiocrat Jessica Riskin does the same Vardi Lianne 2012 The Physiocrats and the World of the Enlightenment Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 9 10 ISBN 9781107021198 Archived from the original on 3 June 2021 Retrieved 15 October 2020 Anne Robert Jacques Turgot 1727 1781 The Concise Encyclopedia of Economics Library of Economics and Liberty 2nd ed Liberty Fund 2008 archived from the original on 2 December 2019 retrieved 16 July 2013 Turgot is a Norman surname former first name Old Norse Thorgaut Norman family names of Viking origin Archived 19 February 2020 at the Wayback Machine Surname localization in France Archived 17 May 2019 at the Wayback Machine a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o nbsp One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Turgot Anne Robert Jacques Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 27 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 415 17 H Packwood Adams 1914 The French revolution McClurg p 31 archived from the original on 2 July 2014 retrieved 13 March 2016 Robert Nisbet History of the Idea of Progress 1980 ch 5 Fairs and markets and Fondations Kafker Frank A Chouillet Jacques 26 July 1990 Notices sur les auteurs des 17 volumes de discours de l Encyclopedie suite et fin Recherches sur Diderot et sur l Encyclopedie 8 1 101 121 Archived from the original on 24 September 2015 Retrieved 26 July 2021 via www persee fr The impot de quotite is the result of the application of a tax where the result cannot be calculated in advance Reflections on the Formation and Distribution of Wealth Archived from the original on 8 August 2017 Retrieved 17 May 2006 Me Nguyen Benoit Malbranque 25 May 2014 Les Chinois de Turgot Institute Coppet The literary device adopted by Turgot allows for the presentation of the subject from the ground up without appearing to undervalue the reader s intelligence Compare the Persian Letters of Montesquieu with their solemn explication of European customs to an outsider in Montesquieu a vehicle for satire Peter D Groenewegen 2002 Eighteenth century Economics Turgot Beccaria and Smith and Their Contemporaries Psychology Press p 265 ISBN 9780203458785 archived from the original on 2 July 2014 retrieved 13 March 2016 Peter Kropotkin 1909 Chapter 5 The Great French Revolution 1789 1793 Translated by N F Dryhurst New York Vanguard Printings Peter Kropotkin 1909 Chapter 5 The Great French Revolution 1789 1793 Translated by N F Dryhurst New York Vanguard Printings Louis XVI wanted to go out on the balcony of the palace to speak to them to tell them that he would reduce the price of bread but Turgot like a true economist opposed this The reduction in the price of bread was not made Peter Kropotkin 1909 Chapter 6 The Great French Revolution 1789 1793 Translated by N F Dryhurst New York Vanguard Printings Fraser 2006 p 250 Peter Kropotkin 1909 Chapter 5 The Great French Revolution 1789 1793 Translated by N F Dryhurst New York Vanguard Printings Representative Government such as was established by the English after their revolution and was advocated in the writings of the contemporary philosophers also began to be spoken of With this end in view Turgot had even prepared a scheme of provincial assemblies to be followed later on by representative government for all France in which the propertied classes would have been called upon to constitute a parliament Louis XVI shrank from this proposal and dismissed Turgot but from that moment all educated France began to talk of a Constitution and national representation Wendell 1979 Further reading editBrewer Anthony 1987 Turgot Founder of Classical Economics Economica 54 216 417 28 doi 10 2307 2554177 JSTOR 2554177 Dakin Douglas 1939 Turgot and the Ancien Regime in France London Methuen Fraser Antonia 2006 Marie Antoinette the journey Toronto Anchor Canada ISBN 9780385662871 Groenewegen Peter D 2002 Eighteenth Century Economics Turgot Beccaria and Smith and their Contemporaries London Routledge ISBN 0415279402 Hart David 2008 Turgot Anne Robert Jacques 1727 1781 In Hamowy Ronald ed The Encyclopedia of Libertarianism Thousand Oaks CA Sage Cato Institute pp 515 16 doi 10 4135 9781412965811 n315 ISBN 978 1412965804 LCCN 2008009151 OCLC 750831024 Kaplan Steven L 1976 Bread Politics and Political Economy in the Reign of Louis XV The Hague Martinus Nijhoff ISBN 9024718732 Lifschitz Avi 2004 Language as the Key to the Epistemological Labyrinth Turgot s Changing View of Human Perception PDF Historiographia Linguistica 31 2 3 345 65 doi 10 1075 hl 31 2 07lif Meek Ronald L 1976 Social Science and the Ignoble Savage New York Cambridge University Press ISBN 0521209692 Palmer R R 1976 Turgot Paragon of the Continental Enlightenment Journal of Law and Economics 19 3 607 19 doi 10 1086 466889 S2CID 154818247 Rothbard Murray N 1999 Chapter 3 A R J Turgot Brief Lucid and Brilliant PDF In Holcombe Randall G ed The Great Austrian Economists Auburn Alabama Ludwig von Mises Institute ISBN 0945466048 Tellier Luc Normand Face aux Colbert les Le Tellier Vauban Turgot et l avenement du liberalisme Presses de l Universite du Quebec 1987 816 pages Etext Turgot baron de l Aulne Anne Robert Jacques 2011 The Turgot Collection Writings Speeches and Letters of Anne Robert Jacques Turgot Baron de Laune Ludwig von Mises Institute p 560 ISBN 9781933550947 Wendel Jacques M 1979 Turgot and the American Revolution Modern Age 23 3 282 89 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Anne Robert Jacques Turgot nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about Anne Robert Jacques Turgot nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Anne Robert Jacques Turgot Baron de Laune Andrew Dickson White s Seven Great Statesmen in the Warfare of Humanity with Unreason 1915 at Wikiquote Turgot Page Archived 4 February 2017 at the Wayback Machine at McMaster Jacques Turgot at Catholic Encyclopedia Turgot on progress and political economy Notice Biographique by Paulette Taieb 12 mai 1776 Renvoi de Turgot by Herodote The Institut Turgot in Paris Turgot amp 18th and 19th century Dutch economics and politics The Brilliance of Turgot by Murray N Rothbard Works by Anne Robert Jacques Turgot at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Political officesPreceded byPierre Etienne Bourgeois de Boynes Secretaries of State for the Navy20 July 1774 24 August 1774 Succeeded byAntoine de SartinePreceded byJoseph Marie Terray Controllers General of Finances24 August 1774 12 May 1776 Succeeded byJean Etienne Bernard Clugny de NuitsPortals nbsp Economics nbsp France nbsp Liberalism nbsp Libertarianism nbsp Politics Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Anne Robert Jacques Turgot amp oldid 1204304444, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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