Adam Smith has hijacked by the free market right. And that's a shame. Because his views don't fit into the simple left/right narrative that people often feel the need to pull people into.
He was writing in the 18th Century. In the hayday of the British Empire. When slavery was legal. When vast monopolies trading from the City of London screwed over other countries (and other parts of the UK). You can't really read this book and be in any doubt where the wealth of the UK has come from.
And although it's hard to read his views on slavery (he was anti-slavery but he wasn't a very progressive voice on this) he was progressive on issues such as regulation of the financial sector, and the mercantile class. He really slags off the East India Company, the British Empire, and said the interests of the City of London were in conflict with the long term economic future of the UK.
It's a shame that so much of what he said is still so relevant today. This is what he said about banking regulation, just as our government reduces regulation to pander to the needs of HSBC:
‘though the principles of the banking trade may appear somewhat abstruse, the practice is capable of being reduced to strict rules. To depart upon any occasion from those rules, in consequence of some flattering speculation of extraordinary gain, is almost always extremely dangerous, and frequently fatal, to the banking company which attempts it.'
He is also pretty good on equality
‘No society can surely be flourishing and happy, of which the far greater part of the members are poor and miserable."
And has interesting stuff to say about labour value, land taxes (which he was in favour of), role of the state, the dangers of boards of directors looking after other people's money, and loads of other stuff.
I couldn't recommend reading this because it is such a slog but I absolutely cannot recommend reading the edited version the think tank the 'Adam Smith' Institute produced. They cut out a lot of key content, and where they have to include something put comments in afterwards like this:
"At best his words are misleading, at worst they are mistaken". So, that's the Adam Smith Institute there saying how they feel that, um, Adam Smith is mistaken.