Global Times

Sharp drop in bond yields indicates overconfid­ence in health of French economy

- The author is Swaha Pattanaik, a Reuters Breakingvi­ews columnist. The article was first published on Reuters Breakingvi­ews. bizopinion@globaltime­s.com.cn Page Editor: liqiaoyi@globaltime­s.com.cn

In some parts of the financial market, it’s as if the eurozone debt crisis never happened. The gap between benchmark French and German bond yields last week shrank to its smallest since 2009, before the countries that share the single currency were hit by financial shocks that threatened monetary union itself. Such indiscrimi­nation is premature, and stores up fresh problems.

French 10-year government bond yields on December 4 and 5 were only 15 basis points higher than their German counterpar­ts. That spread was more than five times as wide in February, when concern was rife that anti-euro farright leader Marine Le Pen might win the French presidenti­al elections. The fact that France is now in the vanguard of those who want eurozone members to have closer ties may partly explain investors’ appetite for its debt.

President Emmanuel Macron has called for the bloc to have a finance minister and budget of its own. Others, such as German Chancellor Angela Merkel, want to turn the eurozone bailout fund into a European Monetary Fund to monitor countries’ finances and, if necessary, lend to them. The European Commission on Wednesday published proposals to strengthen the eurozone that included elements from each camp.

Such plans may blind investors to the difference­s between the public finances of Germany, which has run a budget surplus since 2014, and France. The latter’s fiscal deficit has surpassed the EU cap of 3 percent of GDP every year since 2008 and may only just fall to that limit in 2017. Worse still, Paris’s structural budget deficit, which strips out the impact of economic cycles and one-offs, is barely falling while debt will rise to 96.9 percent of GDP in 2017 – well above Germany’s 64.8 percent, the European Commission reckons. Such difference­s wouldn’t matter much in a true fiscal union but nothing so radical is likely. Germany will resist a substantia­l eurozone budget. And any European Monetary Fund will only be effective if it has powers to step on national government­s’ toes. The idea of introducin­g a mechanism to allow sovereign debt restructur­ing may resurface, causing markets to worry once more about public debt levels. Investors who confuse France for Germany could face a rude awakening.

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