The
authors of a new eurozone health-check warned Tuesday that France needs
wholesale reform even before next year's presidential vote if it is to keep its
prized Triple-A credit rating.
"Alarm bells should be ringing for
France," says Holger Schmieding, chief economist of Berenberg Bank,
Germany's oldest private lender and the principal author of the annual study in
partnership with liberal Brussels think tank the Lisbon Council.
"Among the six eurozone countries with a
AAA rating, France achieves by far the lowest ranking in the study's
fundamental health check," Schmieding said. "The results are too
mediocre for a country that wants to safeguard its place in the top league."
France ranks 13th out of 17 on an overall
health-check indicator, according to the Euro Plus Monitor, whose full results
will be presented at a "summit" of policymakers attended by EU
president Herman Van Rompuy over breakfast on Tuesday.
On a separate adjustment scoreboard measuring
economic reform, France came in 15th.
"In most criteria used to rate progress
in the Euro Plus Monitor, France finds itself with scores closer to Spain and
Italy than to other AAA-rated European countries like Germany, Austria and
Netherlands," the authors said.
"Safeguarding France's position in the
top league of European economies will require significant reforms, ideally
starting ahead of the next French presidential election," the first voting
round of which is held in April 2012.
If that doesn't happen, the authors warn of
"further serious slippage in the French performance relative to
Germany."
They give France "the Leviathan award for
the most bloated share of government spending in GDP."
The prescription they offer is for France to
"rein in government consumption" and "improve education
prospects especially for its immigrant population," as well as
"reducing the severity of employment protection that favours privileged
insiders over those looking to get a job."
The report argues that "the eurozone as a
whole is turning into a much more balanced and potentially more dynamic
economy," and dismisses as "wrong" the "oft-heard
suggestion that crisis countries like Greece, Portugal and Spain need to leave
the common currency to regain their external balance."
Under-pressure Italy, whose problems are
frequently said to mask France being pulled up towards spiralling yields on
bond markets, was ranked 14th.
Top of the list were euro newcomer Estonia and
veteran Luxembourg, followed by Germany.
AFP
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