Reflections on the Formation and Distribution of Wealth

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Reflections on the Formation and Distribution of Wealth (also translated as Reflections on the Formation and Distribution of Riches) was a treatise written by the French Enlightenment philosopher and civil servant Anne Robert Jacques Turgot. First published in 1770, this work discusses several topics, among them agricultural society, capital, commerce, money, the nature of interest, and both personal and national wealth.[1]

Turgot wrote the Réflexions in 1766 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.[2] The text was published in 1770 during not only the height of the Enlightenment, but also the emergence of economics as a distinct social science.[3] Adam Smith's The Wealth of Nations is seen as a key text in economics history - yet Condorcet writes in Life of Turgot that "This Essay [Turgot's Reflections] May be Considered as the Germ of the Treatise on The Wealth of Nations, Written by the Celebrated Smith".[4]

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