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French finances in great difficulty: Trichet

Sun Sep 23, 2007 3:53pm EDT
 
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PARIS (Reuters) - European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet said on Sunday that French public finances were in trouble and that the country must respect its European commitments.

Tension is high between the ECB and France's government, with President Nicolas Sarkozy repeatedly blaming ECB policies for sluggish domestic economic growth and the euro's strength.

France has also come under pressure from its euro zone peers to do more to cut its budget deficit.

"French public finances are in very great difficulty and that's a fact, and it is a fact that one is right to underline," he said in a live interview on Europe 1 radio and TV5 television.

He cited various European Commission statistics that cast France in a poor light compared with its European neighbors, highlighting the cost of tax cuts and other planned reforms by Sarkozy that are aimed at boosting growth and employment.

"In 2007, according to the Commission's statistics, France will be the country that spends the most in public spending as a proportion of gross domestic product, not only within the euro zone, but in the 27-member European Union," he said.

"It is obviously a very heavy point for the economy."

Eight years ago, several countries, such as Scandinavian states, were well ahead of France in terms of public spending, Trichet said.

"Careful management of public finances is very important and obviously, in the eyes of the Commission as well as the European Central Bank, France must respect its commitments," he added.  Continued...

 

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