Muscat Daily

Macron’s government to unveil belt-tightening first budget

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Paris, France - French President Emmanuel Macron’s government is set to unveil its first annual budget today, balancing tricky priorities as it seeks to cut taxes while also slashing the deficit.

The young centrist President has pledged to find € 16bn of savings next year, seeing a reduction in the deficit as key to boosting France’s credibilit­y in Europe as he eyes a shake-up of the European Union (EU).

France is one of the few remaining nations in the EU’s bad books for spending beyond the bloc’s deficit limit of three per cent of gross domestic product. Macron wants the deficit to come in lower than that this year for the first time in a decade.

But the former investment banker is also eyeing tax cuts for companies and families worth a total € 10bn, leaving his government with less cash to make up the balance.

“Its ambitions are three-fold: Considerab­le tax cuts, higher spending in certain sectors, and bringing down the deficit,” said Alain Trannoy, head of research at the School for Advanced Studies in the Social Sciences. “That inevitably creates a tension.”

Prime Minister Edouard Philippe has warned there will be tough choices, saying last month that he was ‘not here to be nice’.

An interim budget for 2017 finalised in July included cuts to housing subsidies and defence spending which sparked a backlash from left-wingers in parliament and the head of the armed forces.

Social security is set to see a € 5.5bn cut next year, according to a source close to budget preparatio­ns, while nearly 1,600 civil service jobs will be axed.

In better news for many families, some 80 per cent will see their household tax reduced in a move the government hopes will increase the spending power of consumers.

Open for business?

Macron came to power in May promising to make France a more attractive destinatio­n for investment, starting his presidency by pushing through reforms to the country’s famously complex labour laws.

“France suffers from two ills: A lack of attractive­ness and a lack of competitiv­eness,” said Geoffroy Roux de Bezieux, vice president of business lobby Medef.

The budget ‘ essentiall­y responds to the first problem’, he said.

Macron’s Socialist predecesso­r Francois Hollande had already pledged to bring down corporate tax from the current 33.3 per cent to 28 per cent by 2020.

The new President plans to cut this again to 25 per cent by 2022 as he seeks to cast off France’s reputation for being a difficult place to do business.

Despite the tax cuts, the budgets of several ministries are set to go up in 2018 - notably that of defence, after the armed forces chief quit in a blazing row this summer over Macron’s plans to slash military spending.

People with diesel cars meanwhile face a ten per cent tax rise to 7.6 cents a litre as his government seeks a greener economy.

The environmen­t was at the centre of a € 57bn investment fund unveiled on Monday which includes cash incentives for drivers to trade in heavily polluting cars.

France is forecast to post economic growth of 1.7 per cent this year, but Macron has vowed to make a priority of lowering unemployme­nt stuck at around 9.5 per cent - about twice that of Britain or Germany.

 ??  ?? French President Emmanuel Macron
French President Emmanuel Macron

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