Europe | The French budget

France stares into a “colossal” budgetary abyss

A fragile new government must try to plug the hole. Fast

Black and grey two tone portraits of a worried looking Emmanuel Macron and Michel Barnier. Behind them a red graph line goes up and a black graph line goes downward then levels off.
Illustration: Federico Yankelevich
|PARIS

When a fresh-faced Emmanuel Macron swept into presidential office for the first time, in 2017, he hoped for a grand European bargain. France, which had not balanced a government budget since 1974, would fix its public finances and restore its credibility with its thrifty neighbour. In return, Germany, the euro zone’s biggest economy, would cede ground on French ideas for European integration, such as joint borrowing. Initially the bargain worked. In 2018 and 2019 France cut its annual deficit to below the EU’s limit of 3% of gdp. In 2020, nudged by the need to respond to the pandemic, the EU issued its first big joint bond.

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This article appeared in the Europe section of the print edition under the headline “Fix or perish”

From the October 12th 2024 edition

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