Chirac leaves France sick man of Europe

Blackleaf

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 9, 2004
48,430
1,668
113
Chirac leaves France sick man of Europe

New Zealand Herald
Thursday March 15, 2007
Matthew Lynn



After four decades in politics, Jacques Chirac will leave a dismal economic legacy.

The French President, who announced this week that he will not seek re-election, led a weakened and demoralised country that is in need of drastic measures.

Almost alone among Europe's conservative leaders, he showed little interest in economics or business. As a result, he allowed the debate to be dominated by socialists.

That can be seen in slow growth, high taxes, crippling unemployment, and a hysterical reaction to globalisation. Unless his successor can turn that around, it is hard to see a healthy future for the French economy.

"Chirac, of course, has not been an enthusiast for structural change in the French economy, preferring to stick to the traditional line that the moral defects of the free market make it impossible for France ever to adopt that system," said Stephen Lewis, chief economist at Insinger de Beaufort Holdings SA in London.

There is little satisfaction to be drawn from any survey of Chirac's 12 years in power. He may have had some successes in foreign policy: most countries probably wish they had thought a bit longer about sending troops to Iraq. Yet the persistent failure of the economy has left France rightly nervous about its prospects.


All the verdicts are damning. "Which economy is going to wear the 'sick man of Europe' shirt now?" asked Morgan Stanley chief European economist Eric Chaney in a recent note to investors. "Among the larger euro-area economies, the answer is in my view unambiguous: it is France."

Other European countries are performing better under the same conditions, say economists Patrick Artus, Elie Cohen and Jean Pisani-Ferry.

"Too few French producers are able to compete on quantity or quality, and they have been too timid in reaching out to the new areas of growth in the world," they said in a report for the Centre for European Reform in London. "For a decade, this problem was hidden, initially by the weakness of the euro, and subsequently by the temporary loss of German com-petitiveness. But today it is clearlyvisible."

Spot on. A weak euro gave France a temporary boost. So did the anaemia of the German economy. Now that the euro is strong again, and Germany has put itself on the road to recovery, France looks painfully exposed.

France is losing its share of world markets. The trade deficit swelled to €29.2 billion last year from €22.9 billion a year earlier. The economy grew 2 per cent last year, lower than the euro area's expansion of 2.6 per cent. And France's unemployment rate of 8.5 per cent in January was still among the region's highest.

Chirac must take responsibility for that record. He never bothered to stand up for business and push through free-market changes. Even the 35-hour week remains in place five years after the Socialist Government that created it left office.

In France, there are virtually no pro-business, pro-market voices left. Most of the country isn't even hearing any serious analysis of what is wrong.

The Socialist presidential candidate, Segolene Royal, argues for yet more public spending and fines for firms that move jobs abroad. Her conservative opponent isn't much better. Nicolas Sarkozy is reduced to attacking hedge funds, and calling for a European tax on "speculative movements".

Both candidates should be offering labour-market programmes, lower taxes, and deregulation. Neither is proposing enough to make a difference.

France needs to embrace de-industrialisation, as Britain did more than a decade ago. It must start understanding that globalisation is an opportunity, not a threat: such a highly educated nation should be revelling in the money to be made from free trade. Instead, it is afraid and resentful.

Chirac's legacy is a country that has forgotten how to compete in the global economy, and is reduced to railing against the modern world. Meanwhile, the best and brightest young French people hop on the train to London to make their careers there. It would be hard to think of a more telling indictment of a leader.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz
 

Zzarchov

House Member
Aug 28, 2006
4,600
100
63
The French people are also very happy.

If it means they do worse, why should they care if the economy as a whole does better?


Would you give up $500 if it gave Conrad black $1,000 dollars? It would be a great decision for the economy as a whole, bad for you.

What is the point in a great economy if it can't afford to be a benefit to you?
 

tamarin

House Member
Jun 12, 2006
3,197
22
38
Oshawa ON
So why did France join the EU if it was supposedly so self-obsessive and fearful of globalization? The EU, by its very nature, is a huge globalization organism.
 

Toro

Senate Member
The French people are also very happy.

If it means they do worse, why should they care if the economy as a whole does better?


Would you give up $500 if it gave Conrad black $1,000 dollars? It would be a great decision for the economy as a whole, bad for you.

What is the point in a great economy if it can't afford to be a benefit to you?

Well, first of all, your Conrad Black analogy is specious.

Second, if the French are happy, even though they have an anemic economy that is in front of a tremendous shock to the system, then good for them. I don't care. But the lousy economy isn't really Chirac's fault. It is the fault of the French people.
 

darkbeaver

the universe is electric
Jan 26, 2006
41,035
201
63
RR1 Distopia 666 Discordia
Well, first of all, your Conrad Black analogy is specious.

Second, if the French are happy, even though they have an anemic economy that is in front of a tremendous shock to the system, then good for them. I don't care. But the lousy economy isn't really Chirac's fault. It is the fault of the French people.

That's froncophobic Toro you just hate there French way of life and thier freedom.:alien:
 

Said1

Hubba Hubba
Apr 18, 2005
5,336
66
48
51
Das Kapital
So why did France join the EU if it was supposedly so self-obsessive and fearful of globalization? The EU, by its very nature, is a huge globalization organism.

For one thing (this is just a guess, btw) voting power makes France a fairly influential member. I'm not sure if this has been changed, but at one time, the EU practiced a double majority system that requires a majority of both the EU member states and their total populations for EU laws to pass. Take agriculture subsidies for example, France will benefit if a vote fails to pass with respect to that. Personally, I think the results of this system will produce grid lock within another useless layer of bureaucracy. Then there's the single representation thing within the worlds institutions, lots of opportunity to protect interests under the umbrella of the EU.
 

goat

Time Out
Mar 8, 2007
103
3
18
That's froncophobic Toro you just hate there French way of life and thier freedom.
How long have you been a tool of the frenchies? Do you defend them no matter the cost?

What's important here is Chirac is going and it is too bad it took as long as it did. Poor France, ever the ankle graspers due to an inbred neccessity to be socialist. So in fact Toro is quite correct
But the primary responsibility lies with the French people.
:wave:
 

CDNBear

Custom Troll
Sep 24, 2006
43,839
207
63
Ontario
Almost alone among Europe's conservative leaders, he showed little interest in economics or business. As a result, he allowed the debate to be dominated by socialists.

Need we say more???
 

westmanguy

Council Member
Feb 3, 2007
1,651
18
38
French is turning into a socialist society. And their people are demanding that!

The youths that rallied last year.. the garunteed time off, the equality amongst everyone.

I like travelling in France, but I could never live their. Way to much of a socialistic state for me.

Look at France to see what happens to the economies of SP strongholds.