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France ‘has beaten deficit target’ – finance minister

French Finance Minister Francois Baroin confirmed on Tuesday that France had beat its public deficit target for last year, which will come in at 5.3 percent of GDP instead of 5.7 percent.

France 'has beaten deficit target' - finance minister

“We’ll be at 5.3 percent” of gross domestic product, said Baroin.

The official public deficit figure will be published at the end of March by INSEE.

French officials have indicated that the result would be “substantially” better than the initial target of 5.7 percent.

At the end of January, President Nicolas Sarkozy said the public deficit, which includes the balance of spending of the central government, regions and state health and pensions systems, would come in at 5.4 percent or “maybe 5.3 percent” of GDP.

EU nations are supposed to keep their public deficits at under 3.0 percent of GDP.

France plans to cut the deficit to 4.5 percent this year and reach the 3.0 percent EU ceiling in 2013.

“Restoring (investor) confidence is a slow process, and I’m absolutely convinced we’re in the process of doing it,” said Baroin.

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EMMANUEL MACRON

France’s Macron blasts ‘ineffective’ UK Rwanda deportation law

French President Emmanuel Macron on Thursday said Britain's plan to send asylum seekers to Rwanda was "ineffective" and showed "cynicism", while praising the two countries' cooperation on defence.

France's Macron blasts 'ineffective' UK Rwanda deportation law

“I don’t believe in the model… which would involve finding third countries on the African continent or elsewhere where we’d send people who arrive on our soil illegally, who don’t come from these countries,” Macron said.

“We’re creating a geopolitics of cynicism which betrays our values and will build new dependencies, and which will prove completely ineffective,” he added in a wide-ranging speech on the future of the European Union at Paris’ Sorbonne University.

British MPs on Tuesday passed a law providing for undocumented asylum seekers to be sent to Rwanda, where their asylum claims would be processed and where they would stay if the claims succeed.

The law is a flagship policy for Prime Minister Rishi Sunak’s government, which badly lags the opposition Labour party in the polls with an election expected within months.

Britain pays Paris to support policing of France’s northern coast, aimed at preventing migrants from setting off for perilous crossings in small boats.

Five people, including one child, were killed in an attempted crossing Tuesday, bringing the toll on the route so far this year to 15 – already higher than the 12 deaths in 2023.

But Macron had warm words for London when he praised the two NATO allies’ bilateral military cooperation, which endured through the contentious years of Britain’s departure from the EU.

“The British are deep natural allies (for France) and the treaties that bind us together… lay a solid foundation,” he said.

“We have to follow them up and strengthen them, because Brexit has not affected this relationship,” Macron added.

The president also said France should seek similar “partnerships” with fellow EU members.

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