Having battled his way to the Eylsee Palace and the French presidency
Francois Hollande’s leadership will be tested by a far less conclusive
election result from Greece.
Tomorrow he flies to Berlin to meet Angela Merkel for talks that will see the new French president forced to try to find a way of dealing with Greek voter’s rejection of the country’s enforced austerity under the terms of its EU/IMF bailout deal.
Asad Khan
Financial Analyst (CFB)
(0508774861)
asad@cfb.ae
Click Here https://www.cfb.ae
Tomorrow he flies to Berlin to meet Angela Merkel for talks that will see the new French president forced to try to find a way of dealing with Greek voter’s rejection of the country’s enforced austerity under the terms of its EU/IMF bailout deal.
We
know his anti-austerity rhetoric got him elected but it remains to be
seen if he can win the argument with Merkel and her allies who have
forced the euro zone’s periphery into accepting huge government spending
cuts in return for bailout funds and the support of the ECB.
Analysts
believe Hollande will have to win the support of other euro zone
members if he is to be able to change Germany’s hardline tone on
austerity.
“Hollande
has made it clear in advance that he believes that European economic
policy, and European Central Bank (ECB) policy, should give greater
priority to supporting economic growth. Of course, his current German
counterparts do not share those thoughts, but many other countries
probably do” said Jim O’Neil, the chairman of Goldman Sachs Asset
Management in a research note.
The
problem according to Bob McKee of Independent Strategy is that EU
leaders all agree on the need for growth but disagree on how to get
there. “Hollande’s pro-growth strategy is about higher state spending.
It is about higher taxes on the rich and productive enterprise and more
state sponsored jobs. The result will be a boost in French state
expenditure to 60 percent of GDP from around 58 percent”
“There
will be less growth and the tax income won’t materialize” warns McKee
who is not confident anyone has the answer in the short to medium term.
While
it is true that debt sustainability needs growth, the programme
Hollande advocates will not produce it. It is the type of supply side
reform, recently espoused by Mario Draghi, that will boost productivity,
competitiveness and growth — but after several years delay” said McKee.
Hollande will now be focused on winning a
majority in the French parliament in elections that will take place in
early June and will push ahead with domestic reforms to help achieve
this, according to Nomura political analyst Alistair Newton.
This
will include reducing the retirement age to 60 for some workers,
capping bosses pay at a 20:1 ratio in state-owned enterprises and a 30
percent pay cut for himself and his ministers, according to Newton who
says Hollande’s choice as finance minister will be important.
“We
see the moderate Michael Sapin, a former finance minister and currently
Hollande’s top economic advisor, as a likely finance minister, as well
as, possibly, the current head of the World Trade Organization, Pascal
Lamy,” said Newton in a note to clients following Hollande’s victory.
Whoever he chooses will have a tough time pushing through a deal on a growth pact at the European level according to Newton.
“In
our view, Ms Merkel accepted the need for a package of pro-growth
structural measures as long ago as January, after EU leaders had
approved the fiscal compact. Where the catches may lie is in two
respects, whether the growth package should be agreed before or after
ratification of the fiscal compact, and agreement over the precise
measures to be taken”
Asad Khan
Financial Analyst (CFB)
(0508774861)
asad@cfb.ae
Click Here https://www.cfb.ae
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