Jacques Necker
Jacques Necker (30 September 1732 – 9 April 1804) was a Genevan-born banker and statesman who served as Director-General of Finances for Louis XVI of France in three non-consecutive terms (1777–1781, July–November 1788, and 1789), attempting to address the kingdom's chronic fiscal deficits without taxing the nobility or clergy.[1][2] Born in Geneva to a German-Swiss family of modest means, Necker apprenticed in banking from age 16 and established a prosperous firm in Paris by the 1760s, amassing a fortune through international finance before entering royal service as a Protestant outsider ineligible for full ministerial office.[3][4] His key initiatives included curtailing court extravagance, reorganizing tax collection for efficiency, and funding French aid to the American Revolution via loans rather than new taxes, measures that temporarily stabilized revenues but deepened underlying indebtedness by avoiding structural reforms to privilege exemptions.[2][1] In 1781, Necker released the Compte rendu au roi, the inaugural public budget summary portraying apparent fiscal health and a surplus, which propelled his popularity among the Third Estate but provoked backlash from aristocratic interests and scrutiny from contemporaries who highlighted its exclusion of loan commitments and anticipatory debts, rendering the surplus illusory.[5][4][1] Dismissed twice amid court intrigue—first in 1781 for bypassing traditional fiscal secrecy, then in May 1789 after advocating provincial assemblies—his final ousting ignited Parisian riots that escalated into the storming of the Bastille, underscoring his embodiment of reformist yet elite-sparing policies that fueled revolutionary tensions.[3] Father to the writer Germaine de Staël and husband to salonnière Suzanne Curchod, Necker retired to Switzerland post-resignation, authoring treatises on economics and governance that critiqued absolutism while defending moderated monarchy.[1][4]