France Faces Fiscal Tightrope: From Tax Reliance to Spending Cuts
France must transition from increasing taxes to reducing expenditures to manage its public finances effectively. The Cour des Comptes stresses that the country's 2026 deficit target remains uncertain due to over-reliance on taxes and significant risks in spending projections. Challenges persist amid high tax burdens and potential inflation impacts.
France must pivot from its reliance on tax hikes to advance its fiscal stability through spending cuts, as emphasized by the national audit office on Thursday. This advisory comes amid France’s ongoing struggle to manage its public accounts, raising concerns about the country’s financial outlook.
The report by Cour des Comptes criticizes the government's budgetary approach for leaning on approximately 12 billion euros in additional taxes, including an extension of corporate surtaxes on major corporations. Initial proposals for other revenue-generating measures were diluted or discarded, prompting warnings that remaining strategies could falter if inflation falls short of expectations or companies take steps to reduce impacts on profits.
With the euro zone's heaviest tax burden, France risks stifling competitiveness and employment with more tax hikes, making spending cuts unavoidable. Nevertheless, the budget’s expenditure side is not without its own risks, as evidenced by potential overruns from discarded measures like higher medical co-payments and pension freezes. Even achieving the 2026 deficit target would see national debt climb to 118.6% of GDP, heightening future fiscal pressures.
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