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Bars, restaurants and cinemas might not reopen in January, says French economy minister

France's restaurant sector has been eyeing January 20th as the date when they will finally be able to reopen again. But the economy minister on Monday said nothing was certain and depended on the Covid-19 health situation.

Bars, restaurants and cinemas might not reopen in January, says French economy minister
France is lifting lockdown on December 15th, but bars and restaurants must keep closed. Photo: AFP

“I can’t tell you with certainty that we will reopen bars and restaurants on January 20th, it would be dishonest of me,” Bruno Le Maire told France Info on Monday, the day before France was due to exit its second nationwide lockdown this year.

The government decided to lift lockdown on December 15th and replace it with a nighttime curfew, despite not having achieved the goal of reducing Covid-19 case numbers below 5,000 per day.

Bars and restaurants must remain shut until at least January 20th and the culture sector's reopening date was pushed back from December 15th until at least January 7th.

READ ALSO Calendar: These are the next key dates in France's lockdown

 

But the government has stressed that reopening the remaining sectors will depend on the health situation.

 

Since France's second lockdown began on October 30th, cases fell rapidly from a peak of 50,000 a day.

At the end of November, the government set a target of 5,000 cases a day to lift lockdown, and also stated that cases would have to remain under 5,000 for bars and restaurants to reopen in January.

But recently the drop in cases following the lockdown has stagnated. Since December 9th, France has registered around between 13,000 and 14,000 new Covid-19 cases each day, nearly three times the set goal of 5,000.

“The virus is still circulating and unfortunately it is circulating quite quickly,” said Eric Caumes, infectious disease specialist at the Pitié-Salpêtrière hospital in Paris.

The fear is that increased socialising and travel over the Christmas break could double or even treble the number of daily cases, which again could cause hospital numbers to rise in the ensuing weeks.

“We all fear a re-acceleration during the holidays. I think we are unanimous on that point,” Caumes told BFMTV.

 

If Covid-19 numbers spike, bars and restaurants, but also cinemas, theatres and other cultural spots, might not get to reopen as planned in January.

“We will review the possibility to reopen (cultural establishments) as of January 7th,” Prime Minister Jean Castex said when he laid out the weeks ahead during the press conference on Thursday.

Reopening of the cultural sector would depend on “the health situation and the analysis that we can do of the impact of the end-of-the-year celebrations on the epidemic,” the PM said.

The same would be the case for cafés, bars and restaurant, which currently may only keep a delivery or take-away service.

Both the cultural sector and the restaurant sector are reeling from the financial losses they have suffered due to the pandemic.

“I will meet with (restaurant sector) representatives in the coming weeks. . . to see how we can accompany them long term,” Le Maire said on Monday, referring to the aid schemes in place to help those affected by the lockdown.

 

 

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ECONOMY

French economy beats growth forecast in first quarter

The French economy grew more than expected in the first quarter, official data showed on Tuesday, delivering good news to a government facing scrutiny over the country's huge debt pile.

French economy beats growth forecast in first quarter

The eurozone’s second biggest economy expanded by 0.2 percent between January and March compared to the previous quarter, according to the INSEE statistics institute, which had previously forecast zero growth.

“To all those who want us to believe that our economy is at a standstill: facts are stubborn. French growth is progressing,” said Economy Minister Bruno Le Maire.

“This is a new sign showing the solidity of our economy,” he said, adding that the “government’s strategy is paying off.”

France’s budget deficit has overshot government estimates, undermining President Emmanuel Macron’s pledge to bring national finances back on track within the next four years.

Ratings agencies have cast doubt on the government’s debt reduction target.

The public deficit widened to 5.5 percent of gross domestic product in 2023. The government aims to reduce it to three percent by 2027.

READ MORE: How France’s bid to tackle ‘wild’ budget deficit could impact you

French debt has grown to 110.6 percent of GDP — the third biggest ratio in the European Union after Greece and Italy.

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