France Adopts Reagan Supply-Side Economics (Again)
By Chriss Street
At an April 2012 campaign rally after a torrential rain storm, Francois Hollande on the eve of being the first Socialist Party member elected President of France in 24 years boldly proclaimed: “We have chased away the clouds, the sky is all ‘rose.” The crowd roared their approval of Hollande’s imagery communism red triumphing in France.
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But on January 14th, 2014 Hollande solemnly acknowledged the failure of his collectivist policies by announcing his Administration would cut $40.8 billion of taxes on companies and the self-employed, plus reduce social security charge paid by employers by 5.4%. More shocking to the Left, Hollande said he would pay for his supply-side-economics by cutting $86 billion in public spending. Two decades later and again facing a collapsing economy, the Socialist Party of France is being forced to adopt the supply-side economics of President Ronald Reagan. |
Hollande campaigned on an
economic manifesto of reducing the retirement age from 62 to 60, a 75% income
tax for high earners, constructing 500,000 units of government housing per year
and the creation of 60,000 new public teaching jobs. His policies were a
throw-back to the 1981 election of the last French Socialist Party President
Francois Mitterrand and his Communist Party allies who nationalized 38 banks
and 7 key industries, raised minimum wage, cut work-week hours, increased
public sector wages, created 250,000 government jobs, increased social welfare
payments and radically expanded the nation’s money supply. But as public debt
tripled by 1983, the French inflation rate jumped to 14.5% and unemployment
rate rose to over 10%.
With France about to be
kicked-out of the European monetary system, the Socialist Party was forced to
adopt the supply-side economic policies of cutting taxes and dramatically
slashing public spending that President Ronald Reagan was championing in the
United States. Two years later, inflation had fallen to 4% and unemployment
stopped rising. Although they kept the red rose as its symbol, the Party for
twenty years abandoned socialist policies in all but name and adopted
free-markets liberalism.
After the 2008 financial crisis, the Socialist Party revived its collectivist agenda. They claimed their manifesto of higher taxes and economic stimulus projects would lead to full employment and eliminate the budget deficit. But the Hollande Administration’s deficit spending has driven France into the same crisis as Mitterrand’s government 30 years earlier. The French government now spends 56% of the nation’s GDP, making it one the highest spending governments in the European Union. Hollande’s vast public sector and punitively high tax rates have driven the rich to take their wealth and leave and for businesses to relocate production off-shore. Franc’s annual deficit has doubled and the nation’s unemployment rate is now at a 15-year high of 11%. Chronic youth unemployment now tops 26% and still rising.
As I reported in “French
Rioting to Dump the Euro,” there have been violent demonstrations, such as the
30,000 truckers, farmers, fishermen and food industry workers in November that
staged a series of protests against job-killing taxes and European Union
regulations by waving “Right to Work” banners and hurling rocks and iron bars
at police. The Socialists fear rising “spiral of violence” as living standards
fall. Recent polls showed the right-wing National Front political party seemed
poised to win upcoming elections French municipal and European Union parliament
elections.
Before his speech, Francois
Hollande was already the most unpopular President in French history according
to a poll showing only 26% of the French people have a positive opinion of his
leadership. But after his press conference, members of his Cabinet had to
perform rhetorical acrobatics to deny that the President was adopting
conservative policies. Members of former President Nicolas Sarkozy’s
conservative “Union for a Popular Movement” were baffled on how to respond
after the Hollande essentially co-opted their center-right agenda. It is
unclear how the speech will help the Socialist Party, but it did unify the far
left, which denounced the President as selling-out to pressure from
corporations and financial markets. The French business lobby
MEDEF praised the announcements, but asked for more details.
Francois Hollande in his
speech sought to show the Socialist Party, like the party of Francois
Mitterrand mid-1980s, understands France’s problems and is willing to reverse
policies and adopt measures known in France as the “tournant de la rigueur”
(austerity turn) to fight inflation and regain competitiveness. Hollande is
keenly aware that after the Socialist Party adopted supply-side economics in
1983, the French economy did recover and Mitterrand was re-elected in 1988.
President Ronald Reagan
warned, “Government’s view of the economy could be summed up in a few short
phrases: “If it moves, tax it. If it keeps moving, regulate it. And if it stops
moving, subsidize it.” “The Gipper” must have been smiling down from heaven as
another French President is forced to make another historic capitulation that
government mandated high labor costs and strong public spending were destroying
the economy of France.
Chriss Street is a frequent
contributor to American Thinker & Breitbart Big Government. Follow his blog
at http://www.chrissstreetandcompany.com/ and hear his weekday radio show at
http://agenda21radio.com/
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