And
where, it might be asked, might they go?
'Get
out of decaying France while you can', campaign warns
France's
youth should leave a "decaying and ultra-centralised country run
by old men", according to a new campaign that has sparked debate
on how the country treats its younger generation.
25
September, 2012
Young
French people should seek work and hope for the future abroad,
according to an unlikely trio of influential men in their 30s –
entrepreneur Félix Marquardt, rapper Mokless and TV journalist
Mouloud Achour, who have launched a campaign dubbed
"Barrez-Vous"("Beat It").
In
a tribune in Libération newspaper earlier this month, they said
French young people must face the "embarrassing truth" that
they lived in a "sclerotic gerontocracy that is collapsing a
little more every day".
Mr
Marquardt, who has US nationality, said France's failure to teach
English better in schools and its obsession with protecting its
language was a major obstacle to mobility.
The
country's economic policies have put youth so low on their priorities
that one in four people under 25 is out of work, they argue.
Meanwhile, France's ageing political class refuses to let the younger
generation in.
Their
call followed numerous reports about a rising tide of wealthy and
successful French who are leaving the country to avoid the new
Socialist government's plan to tax the country's highest earners at
75 per cent. David Cameron provocatively offered them the "red
carpet" should they choose Britain as their new tax home.
The
"Barrez-vous" trio said this was not about "tax
evasion, but escape plain and simple" that applied as much to
"apprentice restaurateurs, hairdressers and chauffeurs as to
bankers".
They
apparently had little time for President François Hollande's
electoral pledge to make youth his top priority and his 2.3
billion-euro programme to create jobs for 150,000 young people
without skills.
They
received support from Rokhaya Diallo, founder of anti-racism group
Les Indivisibles, who said the young felt totally ignored,
particularly those from high-immigrant suburbs where unemployment can
reach 40 per cent.
"We're
not going to tell young people to be masochists and stay put in a
country that clearly doesn't like them," she said.
Critics
of the campaign were quick to brand the trio unpatriotic and lacking
moral fibre.
Michel
Sapin, the labour minister, said: "I don't think the idea of
going elsewhere should be an ambition to offer young French people,
even if it's very important to know what's going on there."
Right-wing
former agriculture minister Bruno Le Maire said: "Beware of
provocation. I would say to them: 'Stay and roll up your
shirtsleeves'. France is a wonderful country that we're in the
process of ruining."
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