SHARE
COPY LINK

BUDGET

‘Hero to the rich’: Macron cuts taxes for France’s most wealthy in first budget

French President Emmanuel Macron's business-friendly government unveiled its first annual budget Wednesday, fending off criticism that its tax cuts favour the very wealthiest.

'Hero to the rich': Macron cuts taxes for France's most wealthy in first budget
Photo: AFP

Ministers insisted the 2018 budget would benefit both rich and poor after criticism from left-wing opponents about the slashing of a tax on financial

investments which raised 3.5 billion euros ($4 billion) last year.

Left-leaning newspaper Liberation ran the front-page headline “Hero to the rich” alongside a picture of Macron, a former investment banker who came to power in May promising to make it easier to do business in France.

“We want to create wealth before redistributing it,” Economy Minister Bruno Le Maire told a press conference.

He defended the budget as one which would “benefit all French people without exception”, not just the richest, saying cuts to household tax — due
to be scrapped for 80 percent of families by 2020 — would boost the purchasing power of millions.

“We wanted to protect the least well-off, to protect the most vulnerable,” he added, with ministers pointing to measures to help low-paid workers and
more support for those caring for disabled children.

READ ALSO:

High-paid finance workers will notably face lower taxes on their salaries as the government eyes a lucrative slice of London's banking industry, with
multi-nationals shifting business away from Britain ahead of Brexit.

In total, France plans some seven billion euros ($8.2 billion) in tax cuts, lower than the 10 billion initially planned.

Macron faces a tricky balancing act as he seeks to lower taxes while also slashing the deficit — something he sees as key to earning credibility with
European leaders as he pushes for ambitious EU reforms.

Some 16 billion euros of spending cuts are included in the budget — social security alone is due to shed 5.5 billion — though these targets, too, are
lower than originally planned.

The budget puts a freeze on major infrastructure projects, while nearly 1,600 civil service jobs will be axed.

'Worsening inequality'

Opponents on the left have called Macron's wealth tax reforms a sop for the rich, while he insists he needs to encourage investors to fund companies in France as he seeks to lower a 9.5 percent unemployment rate.

Under the changes — a long-time demand of business groups — gains on financial investments will be taxed at a flat rate of 30 percent, rather than
under a progressive regime.

“These tax measures from the right-wing will have a brutal and violent effect on worsening inequality,” former Socialist economy minister Michel Sapin told Paris Match magazine on Tuesday.

Corporation tax is set to go down to 25 percent by 2022 — down from 33 percent currently.

Deficit down

France's economy is currently growing at around 1.7 percent, but it remains one of the few countries with a deficit above the EU-mandated three percent of GDP.

It is already set to go down to 2.9 percent this year — the first time it will have met the three-percent target in a decade — but Macron wants to trim it further to 2.6 percent in 2018.

The EU's economy commissioner Pierre Moscovici welcomed the belt-tightening.

“The average deficit in the eurozone is not 3.0 percent, it's 1.4 percent,” he told France 2 television. “If you want to be an example to Europe, you have to lead by example at home.”

Despite the cuts, several ministries won a boost to their budget — notably defence, where spending has been a sore point with the military in recent years.

The head of the armed forces sensationally resigned his post this summer in a blazing row with Macron over cuts to defence spending introduced in an interim budget for 2017, passed shortly after he was elected.

For members

ECONOMY

How is Denmark’s economy handling inflation and rate rises?

Denmark's economy is now expected to avoid a recession in the coming years, with fewer people losing their jobs than expected, despite high levels of inflation and rising interest rates, The Danish Economic Council has said in a new report.

How is Denmark's economy handling inflation and rate rises?

The council, led by four university economics professors commonly referred to as “the wise men” or vismænd in Denmark, gave a much rosier picture of Denmark’s economy in its spring report, published on Tuesday, than it did in its autumn report last year. 

“We, like many others, are surprised by how employment continues to rise despite inflation and higher interest rates,” the chair or ‘chief wise man’,  Carl-Johan Dalgaard, said in a press release.

“A significant drop in energy prices and a very positive development in exports mean that things have gone better than feared, and as it looks now, the slowdown will therefore be more subdued than we estimated in the autumn.”

In the English summary of its report, the council noted that in the autumn, market expectations were that energy prices would remain at a high level, with “a real concern for energy supply shortages in the winter of 2022/23”.

That the slowdown has been more subdued, it continued was largely due to a significant drop in energy prices compared to the levels seen in late summer 2022, and compared to the market expectations for 2023.  

The council now expects Denmark’s GDP growth to slow to 1 percent in 2023 rather than for the economy to shrink by 0.2 percent, as it predicted in the autumn. 

In 2024, it expects the growth rate to remain the same as in 2003, with another year of 1 percent GDP growth. In its autumn report it expected weaker growth of 0.6 percent in 2024.

What is the outlook for employment? 

In the autumn, the expert group estimated that employment in Denmark would decrease by 100,000 people towards the end of the 2023, with employment in 2024  about 1 percent below the estimated structural level. 

Now, instead, it expects employment will fall by just 50,000 people by 2025.

What does the expert group’s outlook mean for interest rates and government spending? 

Denmark’s finance minister Nikolai Wammen came in for some gentle criticism, with the experts judging that “the 2023 Finance Act, which was adopted in May, should have been tighter”.  The current government’s fiscal policy, it concludes “has not contributed to countering domestic inflationary pressures”. 

The experts expect inflation to stay above 2 percent in 2023 and 2024 and not to fall below 2 percent until 2025. 

If the government decides to follow the council’s advice, the budget in 2024 will have to be at least as tight, if not tighter than that of 2023. 

“Fiscal policy in 2024 should not contribute to increasing demand pressure, rather the opposite,” they write. 

The council also questioned the evidence justifying abolishing the Great Prayer Day holiday, which Denmark’s government has claimed will permanently increase the labour supply by 8,500 full time workers. 

“The council assumes that the abolition of Great Prayer Day will have a short-term positive effect on the labour supply, while there is no evidence of a long-term effect.” 

SHOW COMMENTS