| France slaps $9b taxes on rich, big firms to balance budget |
PARIS France’s new Socialist government announced tax rises worth 7.2 billions euros ($9 billion) on Wednesday, including heavy one-off levies on wealthy households and big corporations, to plug a revenue shortfall this year caused by feeble economic growth.
In its first major raft of economic measures since Francois Hollande was elected president in May promising to avoid the painful austerity seen elsewhere in Europe, the government targeted companies and the rich with tax hikes.
An extraordinary levy of 2.3 billion euros ($2.90 billion) on wealthy households and 1.1 billion euros in one-off taxes on large banks and energy firms were central parts of an amended 2012 budget presented to parliament.
The law, which also includes increases in taxes on stock options and dividends and the scrapping of tax exemptions on overtime, should easily win parliamentary approval before a July 31 deadline, given the Socialists’ comfortable majority.
Hollande says the rich must pay their share as France battles to cut its public deficit from 5.2 per cent of GDP last year to an EU limit of 3 per cent in 2013 despite a stagnant economy and rising debt.
“We are in an extremely difficult economic and financial situation,” Finance Minister Pierre Moscovici told a news conference. “In 2012 and 2013, the effort will be particularly large. The wealthiest households and big companies will have to contribute.”
The budget followed a grim assessment of public finances on Monday by the state auditor, which warned that 6-10 billion euros of deficit cuts were needed in 2012 and a hefty 33 billion in 2013 for France to avoid a surge in public debt dragging it into the centre of the euro crisis.
One of the highest state spending levels in the world has raised France’s debt by 800 billion euros in the last 10 years to 1.8 trillion - equivalent to roughly 90 per cent of GDP, the level at which economists say it starts to harm economic growth.
Budget Minister Jerome Cahuzac said that, while the initial focus this year was on tax rises for the wealthy, the government would progressively rein in spending from 2013 onwards.
“Cutting spending is like slowing down a supertanker: it takes time,” he told Reuters.
Having promised to freeze central government spending without cutting staffing levels, Hollande faces the difficult task of convincing France’s powerful public sector unions to accept a cap on pay rises and promotions.
This is likely to figure on the agenda of a “social conference” next week with unions and employers.
“I think the unions accept this idea of rigour,” Civil Service Minister Marylise Lebranchu told RTL radio, insisting that upcoming measures would not amount to draconian austerity. The Socialists accused the previous government of President Nicolas Sarkozy of deliberately overestimating economic growth and tax revenues by several billion euros ahead of presidential elections in April and May.
Prime Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault on Tuesday slashed this year’s official GDP growth forecast to 0.3 per cent from a previous estimate of 0.7 per cent, and to 1.2 per cent in 2013 from 1.75 per cent previously.
The amended budget eliminated a number of measures taken by Sarkozy’s government, such as a tax exemption on overtime for companies with more than 20 employees. Scrapping that measure should raise 980 million euros this year.
Repealing a law which shifted labour charges onto a rise in VAT sales tax will also have a net positive effect of 800 million euros, and a doubling of a tax on financial transactions to 0.2 per cent will bring in 170 million euros.
Reuters
|
 |
|
|
| NEWS UPDATES |
|
|
|
|
|
|