After Louis XVI's financial reforms, the burden of taxes primarily fell on the Third Estate, which comprised commoners, including peasants, workers, and the bourgeoisie. Despite the reforms aimed at addressing France's financial crisis, the privileged classes, such as the clergy and nobility, largely retained their tax exemptions, resulting in increased resentment among the Third Estate. This disproportionate tax burden contributed to rising discontent that ultimately fueled the French Revolution.
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