The Daily Telegraph

France denies plotting tax raid as budget deficit soars to €154bn

- By Henry Samuel in Paris and Szu Ping Chan

EMMANUEL MACRON and his ministers have been accused of losing a grip of France’s finances after the budget deficit surged well above forecasts.

Bruno Le Maire, the finance minister, was forced to deny the government will launch a tax raid to plug a yawning gap in the budget after the country borrowed more than expected last year.

The state deficit expanded to 5.5pc of economic output in 2023 from 4.8pc in the previous year, far wider than the 4.9pc the government planned for.

The deficit between tax revenues and public spending grew to €154bn (£132bn) last year. Debt as a share of gross domestic product now stands at 110.6 pc in France, according to the statistics agency Insee.

The surge in the deficit is a blow to Mr Macron, who has sought to burnish his reputation as business friendly since first taking office in 2017.

Pierre Moscovici, head of the Cour des Comptes, France’s state auditor, warned that it was “very, very rare” for a government to get its deficit forecast this wrong.

He said: “This puts us in an unfortunat­e position. We have the highest public debt in Europe – and it’s gone up by 2 percentage points since the Covid crisis – and we have the highest social contributi­ons in Europe and among the highest public debts in Europe – we’re third on the podium behind Italy and Greece and the only one whose public debt is not going down.

“And on top of that we have the highest public deficit in the eurozone.” While the ratio of debt to GDP fell slightly last year compared with 111.9pc in 2022, it remains well above its pre-pandemic level of 97.9pc in 2019.

The latest figures throw into question Mr Macron’s strategy of repairing finances by relying on growth-enhancing overhauls, such as loosening labour laws or raising the retirement age.

France has downgraded its forecast for growth this year from 1.4pc to 1pc, after growth of 0.9pc in 2023. Mr Moscovici said: “If you add all that together, we have reached a stage where… we have to tell the truth to the French about the state of our public finances.

“How do you expect us to fund the additional expenditur­e we need on Ukraine when we are this indebted?”

France has announced €10bn of spending cuts this year in an effort to reduce its deficit to 4.4pc of GDP this year. Like all eurozone members, it is committed to keeping its deficit to below 3pc of GDP.

The government has committed to an additional €12bn in savings in 2025, though Thomas Cazenave, France’s budget minister, has suggested that next year’s saving target will have to be increased to €20bn.

Charlotte de Montpellie­r, a senior economist at ING, said that the deficit reduction goal this year looked “completely unattainab­le”.

Despite the shortfall in state coffers, Mr Le Maire confirmed yesterday that he was “totally opposed to any tax increase” to reduce the gap.

He told RTL radio: “We can perfectly make savings on public spending without digging into the pockets of the French.” However, François Bayrou, a key centrist backer of the Macron government, said the topic of targeted tax rises should be debated.

He said on Monday: “Lawmakers have been looking at options and how we could have better balance in terms of fairness without damaging the image of France that attracts investment.”

Ms de Montpellie­r said: “Since the beginning of Macron’s presidency, the idea has been not to raise taxes, but only to modulate spending. In recent days, the government’s supporters seem to be going back on this idea, with some mentioning targeted tax rises. Tax rises can therefore no longer be ruled out.”

Bruno Retailleau, of the centre-right French Republican­s, warned: “We are the most taxed country in the OECD. If the government [raised taxes], it would be a mistake.”

Political opponents seized on the figures ahead of European elections in June. Eric Ciotti, head of the Republican­s, said: “5.5pc deficit and 110.6pc public debt: the latest symphony from the ‘Mozart of finance’ [Macron’s nickname] sounds like a swan song.”

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