As
Cars Burn In France, The Industry Of Hope Booms
3
January, 2013
New
Year’s Eve was the main event. And it didn’t disappoint: 1,193
vehicles were burned in France in the course of a few hours, said
Interior Minister Manuel Valls. Up 4% from 2009, when 1,147 vehicles
were burned. A tradition no one has the balls to explain. In the days
leading up to the annual rite, Valls had promised "complete
transparence," in contrast to the Sarkozy government, which had
hushed up the numbers since 2009. But it’s a year-round event:
40,244 vehicles were burned during 2011 and 43,568 the year before.
Even Valls was “shocked” by these numbers.
But
the massive destruction of functional vehicles (most of them paid for
by insurance) wasn’t nearly enough to bail out the automakers. New
vehicle sales for the year 2012 dropped 13.9% from the already
miserable levels of 2011. Only 1.89 million vehicles were sold, a low
not seen since 1997, despite the growth of the population.
Particularly alarming: sales by French automakers collapsed, PSA
Peugeot Citroen by 17.5%, Renault by 22.1%. All hopes had been riding
on their new models—the Peugeot 208 and the Renault Clio 4—which
hit the market in the fall, but those hopes have since evaporated.
Other
automakers got clobbered as well: Ford was down 19.8%, Fiat, which
hardly anyone is buying anymore, fell 23.7%, only to be outdone by
GM's beleaguered Opel, down 23.8%. But there were winners: BMW was up
2.3%, Mercedes 5.3%, and Hyundai-Kia 28.2%! So the French automakers,
like other French industries, have a complex problem: uncompetitive
products in a morose market with unemployment that has been climbing
with incessant brutality, and a tax quagmire of unprecedented
proportions [“Trench Warfare” Or “Civil War” Over
Confiscatory Taxes In France].
But
there is one industry that has been booming under these conditions.
The industry of hope. Française des Jeux (FDJ), third largest
lottery in the world, 72% owned by the state, reported revenues for
2012, and they were hot! €12.1 billion, up 6.1% over prior year. An
all-time record. Despite the attacks on its historic monopoly by
online gambling.
FDJ
prides itself in its 26.3 million “clients”—40% of France’s
population of 65 million! Its products are sold in 34,300 retail
locations: tobacco shops, bars, newspaper stands and, in French
possessions overseas, grocery stores and gas stations. One retailer
per 1,895 inhabitants—twice as many as post offices. They’re
truly everywhere. And they beckon with hope.
Every
day, FDJ says, 8-10 million people walk into these places to
surrender voluntarily their hard-earned money, their unemployment
compensation, or their social benefits in exchange for a tiny sliver
of hope. The hope to become an instant millionaire. Alas, tiny it is:
of the 26.3 million clients who in 2012 more or less regularly bought
these slivers of hope, 41 became instant millionaires. The odds are
not good. But unlike French cars, hope sells.
The
record performance was aided by an "exceptional calendar,"
including three Fridays the 13th (there was one in 2011), three
propitious dates—November 10, 2012 (10-11-12), December 12, 2012
(12-12-12), and December 21, 2012 (21-12-12). They perked up the
spirits of the lottery-ticket scratchers who shelled out €5.4
billion, up 7.5% from 2011. All games combined rang up €10.7
billion, up 3.7%. Sports betters, who went gaga over two
international mega-events, the Olympics in London and the European
Football Championship, handed €1.4 billion over to FDJ, a 27% jump
from prior year. If only Renault could do that.
Of
this ballooning revenue, FDJ "redistributed" 95%, or €11.5
billion. The largest chunk, €7.9 billion was paid out to its lucky
“clients.” Over €3 billion was shuffled into the coffers of the
state (lovingly called "general interest"), the vast
majority via a 23.5% betting tax. And €587 million (4.9% of
revenues) was paid in commissions to FDJ’s 34,300 retailers—€17,113
per shop, on average, a substantial source of income for these mostly
mom-and-pop operations. That was up 6.1% from 2011, and 15.4% from
2010. There is no crisis in the industry of hope.
Hope
of winning the lottery has infected even a French street-theater
company whose giant marionettes have become famous around the world.
It decided to attack a true giant, an evil American multinational.
But there are complications: political connections, government
subsidies, Coca-Cola commercialism, and awesome art. Read.... French
Artists Strike out Against an Evil American Empire.
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