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French public finances: Time for change

By Laurence Boone and Jean Pisani-Ferry

05th of May 2011

For the past thirty years, France has consistently failed to manage its public finances. The debt-to-GDP ratio
has inched upwards year after year, budgetary policies have been unfailingly pro-cyclical, and the country
has squandered most of its credibility with EU partners because of repeatedly unkept promises.

The time, however, has now come and budgetary issues will take centre-stage in the next presidential
elections. The reasons for this are twofold. The first is that, in order to regain control of its finances, France will
have to carry out unprecedented budgetary adjustments – to the tune of 4% of GDP (80 billion euros) over
five years. The second reason is that France’s external creditors will no longer tolerate recurrent deficits, and
the pressure from European budgetary surveillance will be stronger.

These two constraints will apply to all presidential candidates. Only the pace and composition of the
adjustment will be within their power: the target is not really theirs to define. It would therefore be desirable to
see the presidential campaign focus on the key choices for the consolidation strategy: the balance between
spending cut and tax increases, and the precise nature of these adjustments.

This situation calls for a new approach to policymaking that would delineate between unavoidable budgetary
discipline and what results from policy preferences; align budgetary policy with economic objectives; and
help regain lost credibility.

The reform proposal presented by the French government aims to require annual budgetary laws to be
consistent with framework laws (lois-cadres) establishing multiannual guidelines for public finances. The
content of these laws, the period they cover and how their provisions apply to annual budgets should be
determined by what the French call an “organic law” (procedural laws that stand below constitutional level
but above standard legislation).

This proposal offers an opportunity to reflect on a much-needed (and much-delayed) national definition of
fiscal responsibility. With the presidential campaign on the horizon, the timing for such a reflection is perhaps
not ideal. But the issue will not disappear after the elections, and it would be a shame for tactical
considerations to completely overshadow the debates.

The government proposal is based on a report prepared by former IMF head Michel Camdessus. It addresses
shortcomings of past budget practices but requires amendments on several points.

First, the proposal does not set a time frame for the consolidation of public finances. The risk is that
governments will stick to the minimum and that public debt will remain at high levels. France should set itself
a debt target to be reached in twenty years’ time, a long enough period for the adjustment not to weigh
excessively on growth.

Second, the time period covered by the multiannual budgetary planning should be specified, which the
proposal does not do. A recent parliamentary report recommends three years. We would prefer the
multiannual planning horizon to coincide with the five-year legislative and presidential terms. The passing of
© Bruegel 2011 www.bruegel.org 1
a multi-year law at the beginning of the term would set guidelines for fiscal policy in the remaining years. This
would facilitate evaluation by the citizens of each administration’s budgetary record.

Thirdly, there is a need to correct past deviations. Over five years, slippages and good surprises can lead to
significant divergence from planned trajectories. It is thus important to create a notional control account, so
that beyond a given threshold differences between planned and realised outcome can be compensated for in
the following years. Such a procedure would allow enough flexibility with respect to the cycle, but would avoid
persistent slippages.

Lastly, the reform should provide for the creation of an independent Council for Fiscal Responsibility, with no
executive power but that would be entrusted with carrying out budgetary projections, providing the economic
forecasts used for the budget, and evaluating policies. This would enhance the quality of projections and
evaluations, provide greater transparency in public debates, and ensure that annual decisions and long-term
objectives are consistent.

It is high time to rethink France’s fiscal framework: it is key for regaining the economic independence
underpins policy choices.

Translation of an op-ed in Les Echos of 5 May 2011. This op-ed is based on the authors’ contribution to Quelles
réformes pour sauver l’Etat? edited by Jean-Paul Betbèze and Benoît Coeuré, Cercle des économistes /
Descartes / PUF, Paris, forthcoming May 2011.

© Bruegel 2011 www.bruegel.org 2

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