NOBODY is going to lead France to recovery
Francois
Hollande holds crisis talks after 'worst week' for bruised party
Factory
closures and spending deficit have fuelled voters' doubts over
ability of president to lead country to recovery
28
October, 2012
President
François Hollande will meet the heads of global economic
organisations for crisis talks on Monday after suffering a series of
damaging economic blows in what was his worst week since taking power
five months ago.
The
French leader has been hit by soaring unemployment figures, further
factory closures and job losses, and plummeting popularity on top of
growing fears that he and his Socialist government are failing to
address the country's problems. Members of the opposition
right-of-centre UMP have accused them of being "amateurs".
The
meeting with chiefs of international organisations, including the
International Monetary Fund, the World Bank, the Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development and World Trade Organisation,
has been billed by the Elsyée as a "sharing of views".
However,
sources told the Observer the economists will urge Hollande to press
on with key structural reforms to improve France's competitiveness on
the world market and restore confidence at home and abroad. World
financial institutions are said to be encouraged by Hollande's
efforts to reduce France's large public spending deficit, but are
seeking more from the French leader.
Hervé
Boulhol, a senior OECD economist, said France needed "deep
structural reforms" to improve public and global confidence in
the country. "Then people will believe there is a clear
political direction towards tackling unemployment, public spending
and competitiveness. It is these three things that need to be
addressed," he said.
"At
the moment, France is just above average in Europe, but if we are to
avoid the extreme situations other countries have found themselves
in, one has to find a way out of this crisis. There's no room for
complacency."
As
the French head off for an autumn break after weeks of increasingly
gloomy news, commentators have warned of growing anguish and despair
among voters and deep disillusionment with the country's Socialist
government.
"People
knew there would have to be, as Churchill said, blood, sweat and
tears and this was never going to be popular," Jérôme Fourquet
from the opinion pollster Ifop, which carries out regular surveys of
the public mood in France, said: "They knew there would be tax
rises and reforms, whoever was elected, and they were prepared to
make the effort, even if painful, if it was worth it. But with the
situation seemingly getting worse, people don't see a light at the
end of the tunnel and Hollande is not providing one. This has made
people pessimistic, anxious and fearful."
The
French, pollsters admit, have a tendency to be "morose",
but the metaphor of an economically battered France as a ship in a
storm taking on water, while passengers look desperately to the
captain to save them, is often heard these days, along with concern
that Hollande and his Socialist crew are not sufficiently experienced
to handle the crisis.
In
such a climate, the slightest faux pas has created a full-blown
tempest. Last week prime minister Jean-Marc Ayrault suffered what was
dubbed Black Wednesday after announcing the French Constitutional
Court was to scupper a housing bill before the council had even sat
down to decide. The government was bashed again for appearing to
lobby against a report it had itself commissioned, on how to improve
France's economic competitiveness and plug a trade deficit that
reached a record €70bn (£56bn) in 2011, after its author suggested
a "massive" cut in business taxes.
News
that unemployment, having broken the 3 million barrier in August, had
leaped by 46,900 in September, the highest monthly increase since
2009, plus more factory closures and layoffs, made the general gloom
even murkier.
Carine
Marcé of pollster TNS-Sofres, whose recent survey discovered that
70% of French people thought things could only get worse, said the
daily bad news had created a vicious cycle.
"Every
day there is the announcement of more job losses and people worry
even when it doesn't affect them, because they think they're next.
And when people are worried, they consume less and it becomes the
snake biting its own tail." She added: "The French have
been morose for 30 years; François Hollande fed them hope of things
improving but the French had no great expectations. They knew their
country had been hit by crisis and there was no magic solution.
"People
are not convinced by the government, not convinced they are good
enough. They used to say, 'France is not Greece or Spain', but now
they are beginning to worry it is heading that way."
Fourquet
agreed that the popularity of the president and PM had suffered a
"brutal and spectacular fall", but said the causes were
mostly out of their control. "The factors behind this are
unemployment, redundancies, factory closures, the drop in spending
power, the rising price of energy and petrol. All this weighs heavily
on the morale of the French, but it's not just a problem in France."
Laurence
Sauvage, national secretary of the leftwing Parti de Gauche,
describes the atmosphere in France as "toxic" and warned it
was conducive to driving voters into the arms of the extreme-right
Front National.
"The
Left has incredible, historic power in France... but the government
is not rising to the occasion," she said. "It is sad to see
how afraid and unhappy people are."
She
added: "François Hollande promised the time for change was now.
But there's no change, just disillusion. If this continues, people
will be beating a path to Marine Le Pen."
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