France’s political impasse threatens a decade of solid economic progress - FT中文网
登录×
电子邮件/用户名
密码
记住我
请输入邮箱和密码进行绑定操作:
请输入手机号码,通过短信验证(目前仅支持中国大陆地区的手机号):
请您阅读我们的用户注册协议隐私权保护政策,点击下方按钮即视为您接受。
法国政治

France’s political impasse threatens a decade of solid economic progress

Parliamentary manoeuvres aimed at denying influence to extremist parties risk causing a backlash in the future

The writer is a former French minister of state for Europe

In the European parliament elections of 2014, France’s Socialist and conservative parties suffered losses and Marine Le Pen’s far-right forces made strong gains. She called for immediate national parliamentary elections but did not get them. Ten years later, it has been a different story — with uncertain consequences for France’s political stability and its economy.

In early July, the National Assembly elections called by President Emmanuel Macron produced a legislature split into three blocs: a broad and internally divided leftist coalition, Macron’s centrists and the far right. Since then, the most powerful offices have been distributed in a way that is less than fully aligned with the results. The far right has no representatives in these posts. The far left has some, thanks to far-right votes. The centrist camp, despite being the biggest loser of the elections, has the largest representation.

For various reasons, this is a dangerous game. Politically, it gives the impression that the 10mn people who voted for the far right are lower-class citizens. It fuels resentment at France’s democratic system, which does not work for all. In the short term, centrists, Socialists and mainstream conservatives could work together. But this must be a temporary arrangement, otherwise the only alternative to such moderate groups in future French elections will be the far right or far left. We can be sure that, if either gets into power, they will do to their opponents what has just been done to them: deny them influential positions in the legislature.

Economically, these games could jeopardise all France’s recent progress, while failing to confront the need to raise productivity and control public expenditure. Over the past 10 years, a new business spirit has invigorated the country. Foreign direct investment has boomed. Firms have come in large numbers to the annual Davos-like event “Choose France” to promote their investment in France. Unemployment has fallen and purchasing power has been protected. Unlike in some other OECD countries, income inequalities have not increased. Most economic indicators have turned up, except for productivity and the public finances.

The election campaign ignored these issues. Rather, parties, especially on the extremes, advocated higher taxes to finance even more spending and measures that would complicate doing business in France. To level off income inequalities, the same recipe came from the far left and far right: a higher minimum wage (when France already has one of the highest compared with the median wage), higher taxation on “the rich” (a vague notion), and a lower retirement age. Such measures would reverse 10 years of policies that made business in France more attractive and boosted employment. 

France’s real issues are elsewhere. They include the combination of high taxation with poor access to public services outside big cities. France has among the highest levels of redistribution, capping inequalities of income, but this hides deep regional inequalities. According to Yann Algan, a professor at HEC Paris business school, 60 per cent of “angry French” are critical of the high level of taxes, while many complain about less accessible public services. This is understandable.

Even though the country has some of the OECD’s highest tax-to-GDP and public spending-to-GDP ratios, many outside big cities struggle to access health services, endure poor transport facilities and grapple with a deteriorating education system. These regional imbalances are fuelling anger. Rising educational inequality, between those who know how to access quality schooling and those who do not or cannot, raise parental fears for their children’s future. Most of the middle class feel the heavy weight of taxes and are worried about slipping down the social ladder. There is a narrow margin between the “upper middle class”, who earn over €4,000 a month, and the lower level.

France’s low productivity and strained public finances cannot be solved by reversing the pro-business policies of the past decade. Political polarisation cannot be solved by creating a new polarity between “the extremes” and the “republican centre”. The productivity issue demands better education and freedom of entrepreneurship, to allow agility in the working space. The public finances problem demands spending restraint, starting with social expenditure, which amounts to 32 per cent of GDP. The political impasse demands moving away from a single centrist party, as soon as the 2025 budget is approved. France needs a revived centre-left and a revived centre-right if it is to recreate alternatives to the extremes.

版权声明:本文版权归FT中文网所有,未经允许任何单位或个人不得转载,复制或以任何其他方式使用本文全部或部分,侵权必究。

战争导致的税收政策收紧将俄罗斯中小企业推至崩溃边缘

随着莫斯科将增值税提高至22%并大幅削减对中小企业的税收减免,小企业主难以维持运营。

投资者质疑OpenAI的8520亿美元估值

投资者担心,OpenAI的战略调整可能让该公司在准备上市之际更容易受到Anthropic和谷歌的冲击。

伊朗外交使命是万斯的“金杯毒酒”

长期以来一直抨击美国在海外军事干预的万斯,如今已成为推动结束这场冲突的代表人物。

历经二十年协议受挫,伊朗核僵局进一步恶化

上周末举行的直接会谈,依旧没有跳出华盛顿与德黑兰二十多年来反复上演的曲折而令人沮丧的谈判轨道。

伊朗战争会提振中国经济吗?

伊朗战争的外溢效应是否正在推高美国批发物价?英国正走向经济衰退吗?

匈牙利选民踊跃投票,迎来欧尔班时代最大考验

在一场激烈选战之后,执政阵营与反对派都被动员起来,团结在彼得•马扎尔周围。
设置字号×
最小
较小
默认
较大
最大
分享×