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Document 52013SC0384
COMMISSION STAFF WORKING DOCUMENT Analysis by the Commission services of the budgetary situation in France following the adoption of the COUNCIL RECOMMENDATION to France of 2 December 2009 with a view to bringing an end to the situation of an excessive government deficit Accompanying the document Recommendation for a COUNCIL RECOMMENDATION with a view to bringing an end to the situation of an excessive government deficit in France
COMMISSION STAFF WORKING DOCUMENT Analysis by the Commission services of the budgetary situation in France following the adoption of the COUNCIL RECOMMENDATION to France of 2 December 2009 with a view to bringing an end to the situation of an excessive government deficit Accompanying the document Recommendation for a COUNCIL RECOMMENDATION with a view to bringing an end to the situation of an excessive government deficit in France
COMMISSION STAFF WORKING DOCUMENT Analysis by the Commission services of the budgetary situation in France following the adoption of the COUNCIL RECOMMENDATION to France of 2 December 2009 with a view to bringing an end to the situation of an excessive government deficit Accompanying the document Recommendation for a COUNCIL RECOMMENDATION with a view to bringing an end to the situation of an excessive government deficit in France
/* SWD/2013/0384 final */
COMMISSION STAFF WORKING DOCUMENT Analysis by the Commission services of the budgetary situation in France following the adoption of the COUNCIL RECOMMENDATION to France of 2 December 2009 with a view to bringing an end to the situation of an excessive government deficit Accompanying the document Recommendation for a COUNCIL RECOMMENDATION with a view to bringing an end to the situation of an excessive government deficit in France /* SWD/2013/0384 final */
1. Introduction
On 2 December 2009, the
Council decided, in accordance with Article 126(6) of the Treaty on the
Functioning of the European Union (TFEU), that an excessive deficit existed in France
and issued a recommendation to correct the excessive deficit by 2013 at the
latest, in accordance with Article 126(7) TFEU and Article 3 of Council
Regulation (EC) No 1467/97 of 7 July 1997 on speeding up and clarifying the
implementation of the excessive deficit procedure. In order to bring the
general government deficit below 3% of GDP in a credible and sustainable
manner, the French authorities were recommended (a) to implement the
consolidation measures in 2010 as planned and strengthen the fiscal effort from
2011 onwards; (b) to ensure an average annual fiscal effort of above 1% of GDP
over the period 2010-13; (c) to specify the measures that were necessary to
achieve the correction of the excessive deficit by 2013, cyclical conditions
permitting, and accelerate the reduction of the deficit if economic or budgetary
conditions turned out better than expected at the time of the recommendation. On 15 June 2010, the
Commission concluded that based on the Commission services' 2010 Spring Forecast,
France had taken effective action in compliance with the Council recommendation
of 2 December 2009 to bring its government deficit below the 3% of GDP
reference value and considered that no additional step in the excessive deficit
procedure was therefore necessary. This document provides
an assessment of whether France has undertaken effective action towards correcting
its excessive deficit and suggests a new adjustment path that would durably
bring the general government deficit below the 3% of GDP threshold. In
particular, the document examines the budgetary developments since the
Commission communication to the Council on action taken as of 15 June 2010. 2. Recent
macro-economic and budgetary developments and outlook for 2014 The French economy
weathered the 2008-09 global economic crisis better than most other euro area
countries. GDP contracted by 0.1% and 3.1%[1] in those two
years, respectively, compared with a 0.4% growth in 2008 and a 4.4% contraction
in 2009 in the euro area as a whole. Resilience of both public and private
consumption helped alleviate the impact of strongly contracting international
demand. In 2010-11, annual growth rebounded to 1.7%. However, the continued
lack of confidence among both companies and households, in a context where room
for fiscal stimulus dwindled, led to a gradual erosion in growth which came to
a standstill in the last quarter of 2011. As a consequence, unemployment started
rising again in the course of the year. In 2012, GDP remained
flat on the back of rising unemployment, an only slow return of confidence and
continued fiscal consolidation, which weighed on domestic demand. The
quarterly growth pattern showed a downward trend, with GDP contracting by 0.3%
in the last quarter. The unemployment rate rose to 10.5% in the last quarter of
2012 from 9.8% a year earlier and the number of registered unemployed exceeded
3 million people. Driven by rising energy prices, inflation remained almost
unchanged at 2.2% despite sluggish economic growth. All in all, households' real
disposable income fell slightly last year and households reduced savings to
maintain consumption levels. In their 2013 Spring Forecast,
the Commission services expect GDP to decrease by 0.1% this year. The weakness
of households' real disposable income linked in particular to rising
unemployment and tax increases will be only partly offset by inflation slowing
down, while low business confidence is expected to lead to a continued fall in
investment. A slight rebound of the external sector is forecast to translate
into a modest pick-up in activity during the second half of the year. Gradually
improving confidence and recovering real disposable income – assuming no
further consolidation measures – are set to translate into positive growth in
2014 (1.1%). Despite efforts to support employment through subsidised schemes,
the unemployment rate is forecast to further increase, reaching 10.6% and 10.9%
this year and next, respectively. Inflation is set to fall to 1.2% in 2013 on the
back of lower energy prices before accelerating again next year on the back of
planned VAT rises. Table 1 – Comparison of macroeconomic
developments and forecasts The economic crisis has
also had a significant impact on the general government balance. The deficit
rose to an unprecedented 7.5% of GDP in 2009 from an already elevated 3.3% in
2008 due to the play of automatic stabilisers and the discretionary fiscal
stimulus implemented by the authorities as part of the European Economic
Recovery Plan (EERP). At 7.1% of GDP the outcome for 2010 was slightly better,
with the partial phasing-out of the recovery plan more than offsetting the
negative budgetary impact of the local business tax reform and that of reducing
VAT on restaurant services. Fiscal consolidation started in earnest in 2011, in
line with the Council recommendation of 2 December 2009. Strengthened fiscal efforts
together with the complete phasing-out of the stimulus measures and still
relatively robust GDP growth helped reduce the deficit to 5.3% of GDP (revised
up from 5.2%). According to the
national statistics office, the general government deficit reached 4.8% of GDP in
2012, thus falling short of the 4.5% official target. Overall, the state budget
execution showed relatively limited tax revenue shortfalls and spending was
kept under control; healthcare expenditure was also below target while spending
by local governments increased at a somewhat higher pace than targeted. Based on the Commission
services' 2013 Spring Forecast, the headline deficit is set to decrease further
in 2013 on the back of the measures adopted notably as part of the budget. The
overall amount of revenue measures is estimated at 1.4% of GDP. Current
expenditure rules (central government and healthcare) are renewed and this will
contribute to maintaining spending restraint. Lower than previously projected
inflation and the partial suspension of indexation for second-pillar pensions
in agreement with social partners will also help contain expenditure. However,
GDP growth, which is projected well below potential, will negatively affect the
headline balance. Overall, the deficit is expected to reach 3.9% of GDP. Under
the customary no-policy-change assumption, the deficit is forecast to slightly
deteriorate in 2014. Indeed, part of the measures aimed at funding the recent
corporate tax credit for competitiveness and employment (compétitivité-emploi)
are yet to be specified in sufficient detail and a number of one-off tax
payments will expire at end-2013. Regarding risks to this
year's budgetary outlook, while no major expenditure slippages are expected at
this stage, an even lower than currently forecast tax content of economic
activity cannot be discarded. The tax revenue elasticity with respect to GDP underpinning
the spring forecast is 0.9 and 1.0 for 2013 and 2014, respectively. However,
historical data covering the years 1990 to 2010 show that protracted periods of
low growth are often associated with low (below standard) elasticity. The debt ratio, which exceeded
90% of GDP last year, will continue to rise over the forecast horizon on the
back of still relatively high general government deficits and subdued nominal
GDP growth. Stock-flow adjustments including contributions to the European
Stability Mechanism and direct loans to euro area programme counties will also
contribute to increasing public debt. 3. Effective
action 3.1. Background information The current assessment
of effective action is based on the Commission services' 2013 Spring Forecast.
It takes into account the economic and budgetary developments since the last
Council recommendation under Article 126(7) TFEU was issued in December 2009.
The assessment starts by comparing the recommended fiscal effort in the Council
recommendation, the apparent fiscal effort, measured by the change in
structural budget balance, and the adjusted fiscal effort. The adjustment of
the structural balance takes into account (i) the impact of revisions in
potential output growth compared with the growth scenario underpinning the
Council recommendation and (ii) the impact of revenue windfalls/shortfalls
relative to the standard assumptions. This top-down approach in the assessment
is complemented by a careful analysis, including a bottom-up assessment of the consolidation
measures undertaken by the French authorities over the reference period. 3.2. Assessment of effective action in 2010-13 –
overview Based on the Commission
services' 2013 spring forecast, the structural deficit is estimated to fall to
2.2% of GDP this year from 6.1% in 2009. This implies an (apparent) average
annual fiscal effort of 1.0% of GDP over the 2010-13 reference period. When
correcting for downward revisions in potential output growth (+0.1% of GDP) and
revenue windfalls (-0.2% of GDP) compared with the time the Council
recommendation was issued, the average annual fiscal effort comes at 0.9% of
GDP, thus falling slightly short of the recommended effort of above 1% of GDP
(see Table 2). Table 2 – Change in the structural
balance corrected for revisions in potential output growth and revenue
windfalls/shortfalls Average
potential output growth was estimated at 1.3% at the time of the Council
recommendation, vs. 1.1% according to the spring forecast. The main reason
behind is a downward revision in the contribution of total factor productivity,
which has been negatively affected by the economic crisis. Revenue[2], net of
discretionary measures, is forecast to have increased in 2010-13 at a slightly
higher pace than nominal GDP, implying an apparent aggregate revenue elasticity
of 1.1 over that period. This compares with the 0.9 benchmark elasticity used
for the calculation of the cyclically-adjusted balance[3]. The
difference mainly stems from corporate income tax receipts and, to a lesser
extent, social contributions, which are set to have increased more than what
standard elasticities of individual revenue categories would have implied. 3.3. Assessment of effective action 2010-13 –
detailed analysis of measures The cumulated
impact of the discretionary measures implemented by the French authorities over
2010-13 is currently estimated at some 5¼% of GDP using a purely bottom-up
approach (see Table 4). The overall
tax burden increased from 42.1% of GDP in 2009 to 44.9% in 2012 and is expected
to reach 46.3% this year. Discretionary revenue measures are estimated to have
yielded a cumulated 3¾% of GDP over 2010-13, with windfalls and one-offs (in
2013) explaining the rest of that increase. This compares with total revenue
measures of some -3% of GDP in 2000-09. General
government expenditure is forecast to grow by an average 0.7% over 2010-13 in
real terms when deflated by the national consumer price index (CPI). This
compares with an average annual increase of 2.3% in 2000-09. While the latter
increase cannot be necessarily taken as a counterfactual, it clearly points to
strengthened efforts at reining in spending growth in recent years. A recent
report from the Inspection générale des finances concluded that the
average trend increase in general government expenditure (i.e. without any
discretionary measures) for the period 2012-16 is 1.5% in real terms. When correcting
the actual increase over 2010-13 for the measures identified hereafter, we come
out at something very close to this estimate, which also confirms that efforts
have been strengthened over the past few years (see Graph). Graph – General government expenditure
growth corrected for discretionary measures over 2010-13 (counterfactual
scenario) Based on a
bottom-up approach identifying only discretionary measures known in sufficient
detail or that have been subject to an independent assessment[4] and which come
on top of 'customary' efforts already observed in the past and
thus considered as part of the counterfactual, expenditure savings over 2010-13
are estimated at some 1½% of GDP. These include savings at central government
and social security level. Freeze in transfers from central government as well
as relatively constrained financing conditions have probably contributed to the
subdued growth of local spending but this is difficult to substantiate. Regarding
central government, savings were achieved through the General Review of Public
Policies (révision générale des politiques publiques or RGPP) which was
launched by the authorities in July 2007. The initial aim was to reduce public
spending while increasing the efficiency and quality of public action by reviewing
underlying government policies, coverage of activities by the public sector and
delivery modes of public services. However, actual measures were confined to
merging ministerial departments, rationalising the central government's
administration in local territories and sharing support services that cut
across all ministries (HR policy, procurement, etc.) without truly reviewing
major social and economic policies. One symbolic measure of the RGPP was the
non-replacement of half of retiring central government civil servants. Overall,
the underlying savings have contributed to meeting the double spending norm at
central government level over the last few years[5].
The RGPP has now been replaced by the MAP (modernisation de l'action
publique), whose aim is to achieve further savings through a genuine review
of all public policies, including in the areas of social security and local
government. While a number of programmes are currently being reviewed, no
measures have up to date been officially announced. Public sector
wages have been frozen in nominal terms since July 2010, and no indexation is
foreseen before next year. This measure affects all sub-sectors of general
government. Concerning
pensions, the 2010 reform included a gradual increase in the minimum retirement
age from 60 to 62 and in the full-pension age from 65 to 67. The age of 60 was
restored for certain categories of workers as from November 2012. Finally,
healthcare expenditure is subject to a nominal target fixed on an annual basis
(objectif national de dépenses d'assurance maladie or ONDAM). This rule
was strengthened in 2010, notably through (i) an improved governance
(establishment of a steering committee and a statistical committee within the
administration, in charge of following healthcare expenditure on a monthly
basis); (ii) an increased role for the independent committee in charge of
alerting the authorities in case of substantial slippages; (iii) setting aside
funds at the beginning of each year, which are released in the course of the
year depending on whether the target is (expected to be) met. Overall, annual
targets have since been more ambitious and, most importantly, fully achieved. Overall,
while a purely top-down approach provides a mixed picture when it comes to assessing
effective action, a comprehensive analysis suggests that the cumulated impact
of discretionary measures exceeds the recommended fiscal effort. Furthermore,
looking at individual measures yields a more positive picture regarding
expenditure savings, with these estimated to account for one-third of the total
budgetary impact, against an exclusively revenue-based fiscal consolidation
according to the structural balance approach[6]. Table 3 – Composition of budgetary
adjustment 3.4. Budgetary implementation in 2010 After peaking
at 7.5% of GDP in 2009, the general government deficit decreased to 7.1% in
2010, reflecting both cyclical effects[7]
and an improvement in the structural balance (partly offset by deficit-increasing
one-offs). The stimulus package implemented as part of the EERP, which included
both revenue and expenditure measures, was partly withdrawn. Savings also came
from the RGPP review exercise conducted at central government level and the
healthcare spending norm that was fully achieved for the first time since more
than a decade. On the other hand, the local business tax reform[8] and the VAT rate
decrease restaurant services weighed on tax receipts. Another significant
development was the strong decline in investment by local authorities, which
accounts for some 70% of total general government gross fixed capital
formation, which clearly contributed to the subdued increase in public
expenditure. Overall, the
cumulated impact of discretionary measures excluding one-offs is estimated at
¾% of GDP in 2010. However, this is only partly reflected in the structural
balance, which improved by 0.3% of GDP, reflecting different baseline
scenarios. Indeed, the benchmark for measuring the fiscal effort as per the structural
balance is potential output growth, whereas the benchmark for assessing the
budgetary impact of measures as per bottom up is often different across
revenue/expenditure items and often diverges from potential output growth. When
correcting for downward revisions in potential output growth (estimated impact
of +0.1% of GDP) and revenue windfalls (estimated impact of -0.2% of GDP in
2010, mainly due to the strong rebound in corporate income tax receipts)
compared with the time the Council recommendation was issued, the fiscal effort
as measured by the change in the structural balance comes at 0.2% of GDP. Table 4: Main budgetary measures over 2010-13 (excluding one-offs) || Revenue || Expenditure || 2010 || Phasing-out of the recovery plan (+0.6% of GDP) Reduced VAT on restaurant services (-0.1% of GDP) Local business tax reform (-0.2% of GDP) || Phasing-out of the recovery plan (-0.1% of GDP) Savings stemming from the RGPP spending review at central government level (-0.1% of GDP) Savings in healthcare expenditure (-0.1% of GDP) || 2011 || Application of the standard VAT rate to triple-play services (+0.1% of GDP) Other increases in indirect taxation (+0.1% of GDP) Complete phasing-out of the recovery plan (+0.1% of GDP) Increase in income taxation/reduction in income tax expentitures (+0.3% of GDP) Increase in social contributions/reduction in social security exemptions (+0.2% of GDP) || Phasing-out of the recovery plan (-0.1% of GDP) Freeze in base wages of civil servants (-0.1% of GDP) Savings stemming from the RGPP spending review at central government level (-0.2% of GDP) 2010 pension reform (-0.1% of GDP) Savings in healthcare expenditure (-0.1% of GDP) Other measures (-0.1% of GDP) || 2012 || New intermediate VAT rate (+0.1% of GDP) Other increases in indirect taxation (+0.2% of GDP) Increase in income taxation/reduction in income tax expentitures (+0.6% of GDP) No indexation of tax brackets of personal income tax and tax on wealth (+0.1 of GDP) Higher social levies on capital income and gains (+0.1% of GDP) Local business tax reform (-0.1% of GDP) Increase in social contributions/reduction in social security exemptions (+0.1% of GDP) || Freeze in base wages of civil servants (-0.1% of GDP) Savings stemming from the RGPP spending review at central government level (-0.1% of GDP) Additional savings at central government level (-0.1% of GDP) 2010 pension reform (-0.2% of GDP) Savings in healthcare expenditure (-0.1% of GDP) Investissements d'avenir programme (+0.1% of GDP) Other measures (+0.1% of GDP) || 2013 || Increase in indirect taxation (+0.2% of GDP) Increase in income taxation/reduction in income tax expentitures (+0.5% of GDP) No indexation of tax brackets of personal income tax and tax on wealth (+0.1 of GDP) Higher social levies on capital income and gains and on employee savings schemes (+0.2% of GDP) Increase in social contributions/reduction in social security exemptions (+0.3% of GDP) || Freeze in base wages of civil servants (-0.1% of GDP) Savings stemming from the RGPP spending review at central government level (-0.1% of GDP) 2010 pension reform (-0.1% of GDP) Savings in healthcare expenditure (-0.1% of GDP) Investissements d'avenir programme (+0.1% of GDP) Other measures (+0.1% of GDP) || Note: A positive sign implies that revenue / expenditure increases as a consequence of this measure. Annual budgetary impacts are estimated by the Commission services. Measures with a budget impact of at least 0.1% of GDP are listed. || 3.5. Budgetary implementation in 2011 In 2011, the deficit
decreased significantly to reach 5.3% of GDP. While GDP growth remained
unchanged at 1.7%, the improvement mainly stemmed from strengthened
consolidation efforts. Beyond the phasing-out
of the remaining stimulus measures, the 2011 budget contained a significant set
of tax increases. These included a cut in tax expenditures, an increase in the
top rate of personal income tax from 40% to 41%, an advance payment of social
contributions on life insurance policies, higher taxation of supplementary
health insurance schemes, standard VAT rate being applied to triple-play
services and a new tax on banks. Additional revenue measures were announced in
August 2011 but most implied a significant budgetary impact in 2012 only. Overall,
the tax burden increased to 43.7% of GDP from 42.5% in 2010, also on the back
of one-offs and somewhat higher increase in tax revenue (net of discretionary
measures) than nominal GDP growth. On the expenditure side,
the RGPP programme review process yielded additional savings at central
government level. The healthcare spending norm was again (over)achieved along
with substantial savings from the 2010 pension reform. Compensation of
employees grew much less compared with historical trends as base wages across
all government sub-sectors were frozen in nominal terms (on top of replacing
only half of retiring central government civil servants decided as part of the
RGPP). On the whole, public expenditure remained flat in real terms (when
deflated by national CPI) against an annual increase of 2.3% on average between
1999 and 2009. However, part of this was due to exceptional factors such as the
counter-effect of unusually high military equipment deliveries in 2010 (which
alone contributed to lowering expenditure growth by 0.4 pp.). The overall budgetary
impact of discretionary measures excluding one-offs is estimated at 1½% of GDP
in 2011. The fiscal effort as measured by the change in the structural balance
was 1.2% of GDP. Correcting for downward revisions in potential output growth (impact
of +0.1% of GDP) brings it to 1.3% of GDP. However, large revenue windfalls (impact
of -0.4% of GDP) reflected personal and income income tax receipts but also
social contributions growing above what standard elasticities woud have implied.
Based on this, the fiscal effort comes at 0.9% of GDP in 2011. 3.6. Budgetary implementation in 2012 According to the
national statistical office, the headline deficit came out at 4.8% of GDP last
year, thus falling short of the 4.5% targeted until recently by the authorities
(although part of the difference stemmed from the cost of bailing out Dexia,
which Eurostat consided as a capital transfer in late March). GDP growth well
below potential affected negatively the headline numbers and partly offset the
budgetary impact of fiscal consolidation. On the revenue side, measures
included a further cut in tax expenditures, no indexation of tax brackets of
personal income tax and tax on wealth in 2012-13, limiting the possibilities
for carrying over losses in the calculation of corporate income tax, an
additional temporary tax on top incomes and large companies, higher taxation on
capital income and gains, a new intermediate VAT rate (implying an increase from
5.5% to 7% for a number of goods and services) and a rise in excise duties on
tobacco and alcohol. An additional fiscal package was decided in the course of
the year to compensate for lower than previously expected GDP growth. Measures
included a new cut in tax expenditures, a one-off contribution on wealth (which
has since been partly replaced by higher statutory rates of tax on wealth), doubling
the financial transaction tax adopted earlier that same year and some advance tax
payments. Overall, the tax burden increased by another 1.2 pp. to 44.9% of GDP. Regarding expenditure, savings
at central government level came again from the on-going programme review
process. Budgetary appropriations were also cancelled as part of the successive
fiscal packages. The ONDAM spending norm was overachieved for the third year in
a row, thus adding savings compared with the trend increase in healthcare expenditure.
The 2010 pension reform yielded additional savings and the gradual increase in
retirement ages was accelerated. In addition, the indexation of housing and
family allowances on inflation was partly suspended. The freeze in base wages
across all sectors of general government was maintained thus contributing to an
only subdued increase in the public sector's wage bill. On the other hand, the
back-to-school allowance was raised by 25% and the investissements d'avenir
programme (notably consisting in public investments) gave rise to first
disbursements of funds. Overall, the increase in general government expenditure
was 0.9% in real terms, thus remaining well below historical trends. The impact
of one-off measures (e.g. recapitalisation of Dexia, sale of mobile phone
licenses recorded in national accounts as negative expenditure) appeared
broadly balanced. The total budgetary
impact of discretionary measures excluding one-offs is estimated at 1½% of GDP
while the structural balance improved by 1.1% of GDP. Taking revisions in
potential output growth into account (impact of +0.1% of GDP) brings the latter
to 1.2% of GDP. However, revenue net of discretionary measures grew again above
what standard elasticities would have implied (impact of -0.1% of GDP), driven
by indirect taxes, personal income tax receipts and social contributions. Altogether,
this brings the fiscal effort to 1.1% of GDP in 2012. 3.7. Budgetary developments in 2013 According to the
Commission services' 2013 Spring Forecast, this year's deficit is expected to
reach 3.9% of GDP. This is slightly higher than projected in the winter
forecast and mainly due to lower growth prospects and the base effect stemming
from 2012. Cyclical effects will again impact negatively on the headline
figures.[9]. On top of the measures
included in last summer's fiscal package, which will now yield their full-year
effects, the 2013 budget contained a significant set of new tax hikes and tax
expenditure cuts. Additional revenues compared with 2012 will come mainly from
increasing personal income tax on high incomes – the top rate has been
increased from 41% to 45% –, reducing corporate income tax credits, increasing
donation and inheritance taxes, abolishing tax and social security exemptions
on overtime, increasing social contributions on employee savings schemes as
well as on capital income and gains. However, a number of measures have only a
one-off budgetary impact meaning that next year's revenue will actually fall
assuming no further policy action is taken. On the whole, the tax burden is
expected to increase by some 1.4 pp. to 46.3% of GDP, implying that it will
have risen by 4.2 pp. over the 2010-13 reference period. Although the RGPP
programme review process has since mid-2012 been officially replaced by the modernisation
de l'action publique or MAP, it is set to continue yielding savings at
central government level this year as well. Although several programme reviews
have already been launched as part of the MAP, no measures have been specified
so far and the target amount of savings remains unclear. The freeze in public
sector wages has been maintained with compensation of employees again set to
increase below historical levels. In the area of social security, the
healthcare spending norm is forecast to be met as it was in the period 2010-12.
While the 2010 pension reform will provide additional savings along with the
gradual increase in the minimum retirement age, these will be partly offset by
the partial rollback of the reform. Indeed, people who started work before the
age of 20 and achieved a full contribution career have since November 2012 been
allowed again to retire at 60. However, the budgetary impact of this measure
has been compensated by an increase in employers' and employees' social
contributions. On the pension front as well, social partners reached a
historical agreement in March allowing for pensions from supplementary schemes
to be only partly adjusted for annual inflation over 2013-15. While the
agreement has already been applied, substantial savings will be made from 2014
onwards. On the other hand, an additional set of disbursements under the investissements
d'avenir programme will affect negatively the general government balance.
Recent measures such as subsidised employment schemes (emplois d'avenir,
contrats de generation) are planned to be funded through additional
savings. On the whole, general government expenditure is set to increase by
around 1% in real terms this year. However, the ratio of public expenditure
to GDP is set to increase again on the back of low nominal GDP growth
projected. Overall, the budgetary
impact of discretionary measures excluding one-offs is estimated at 1½% of GDP
in 2013. According to the spring forecast, the structural balance is projected
to improve by another 1.3% of GDP. Adjusting for revisions in potential output
growth compared with the time the Council recommendation was issued (impact of
+0.1% of GDP) brings the fiscal effort at 1.5% of GDP. Also taking into account
expected windfall revenues compared with standard elasticities (impact of -0.2%
of GDP) brings it back to 1.3% of GDP (factors do not add up due to rounding
effects). The average annual
fiscal effort over the entire 2010-13 period is estimated at 1% of GDP.
Adjusting for revisions in potential output growth and revenue windfalls brings
it to 0.9% of GDP. The cumulated impact of discretionary measures over that
period is estimated at 5¼% of GDP. 4. Proposed
new adjustment path According to the
Commission services' 2013 Spring Forecast, France is not expected to correct
its excessive deficit by the deadline established in the Council recommendation
of 2 December 2009 despite an average annual fiscal effort over 2010-13 very
close to the level recommended by the Council and an even higher cumulated
budgetary impact of discretionary measures. At the same time, while the
macroeconomic scenario underpinning the recommendation assumed that the output
gap would gradually narrow, GDP is actually expected to grow below potential
over that period. This has clearly had a negative impact on the headline budget
balance. It therefore appears justified to issue a revised EDP recommendation
and to extend the deadline for correction of the excessive deficit. Based on the spring
forecast, the deficit is set to reach 4.2% of GDP next year under the usual no
policy change assumption which implies that only measures specified in
sufficient detail have been taken into account. In particular, it remains
unclear whether the MAP spending review will translate into sizeable (and easy
to quantify) savings and current plans to reform the pension system need to be
further detailed. In addition, maintaining the freeze in base wages beyond 2013
has not been explicitly confirmed. Specifics are also lacking on the projected
slowdown in local government spending. On the revenue side, a number of one-off
tax payments will expire at end-2013 and no specific measures to compensate for
these have been announced so far. In addition, the recent tax credit for
competitiveness and employment appears insufficiently backed by clearly
specified expenditure savings even though these are planned to account for half
of its funding. Building on this,
different scenarios have been considered in order to assess the delay needed
for France to realistically correct its excessive deficit. In particular, an
extension by one year of the deadline would require a fiscal effort in 2013-14
well above the level currently recommended, on top of what is already contained
in the spring forecast, when also taking into account second-round effects of
fiscal consolidation on growth. Given the size of the fiscal effort required,
the negative impact on GDP growth would be significant and a recession in 2014
could not be discarded. Such a scenario would also probably imply additional
measures already this year, on top of those already implemented by the
authorities. On the other hand, a
two-year extension would allow bringing the headline deficit below 3% in 2015
and growth would remain positive in both years, even after taking into account
second-round effects on growth. Given that 2015 is not covered by the spring
forecast, it has been assumed in the baseline scenario that at unchanged
policies (i) the output gap would close in five years' time with this leading
to GDP growth in 2015 at 1.9% (vs. potential growth at 1.1% based on the spring
forecast) and (ii) the structural balance would remain unchanged in 2015.
Together, these two assumptions imply a slight improvement in the headline
deficit in 2015 (3.9% of GDP vs. 4.2% in 2014). On the basis of the
considerations above, granting France two additional years for correcting its
excessive deficit appears warranted. This would be consistent with a fiscal
adjustment conducted in the context of well-specified medium-term plans, at a
steady underlying pace that would ensure the reduction in the deficit without
undermining the recovery. Such an extension would be based on a strict
implementation of this year's budget and a fiscal effort of 0.8% of GDP in both
2014[10]
and 2015, which is below the pace of fiscal adjustment since 2010. This would
be consistent with headline deficit targets of 3.9% of GDP for 2013, 3.6% for
2014 and 2.8% for 2015[11].
The targets for annual improvement in the structural balance take into account
the need to compensate for negative second-round effects of fiscal
consolidation on growth and thus on public finances. The Commission services'
2013 Spring Forecast incorporates only measures adopted or known in sufficient
detail. Therefore expenditure savings and/or revenue measures would need to be
specified, adopted and rapidly implemented in order to achieve the correction of
the excessive deficit by 2015 at the latest while at the same time fulfilling the
proposed fiscal effort in both 2014 and 2015. The situation will have to be
monitored closely and the authorities should stand ready to take corrective
action in the event of expenditure slippages or revenue shortfalls. Furthermore, the
consolidation of public finances and their sustainability would be supported by
(i) proceeding as currently planned with a thorough review of spending
categories across all sub-sectors of general government, including at social
security and local government level, which could translate into a more
expenditure-based fiscal consolidation and (ii) strengthening the medium- and
long-term sustainability of the pension and healthcare systems by further
adjusting all relevant parameters. Table 5 – Forecast of key macroeconomic
and budgetary variables under the baseline scenario Table 6 – Forecast of key macroeconomic
and budgetary variables under the EDP scenario 5. Conclusions On current information,
the average annual fiscal effort after correction for the effects of revisions
in potential output growth and revenue windfalls is estimated to amount to 0.9%
of GDP. This falls slightly short of the average annual fiscal effort of above
1% of GDP over 2010-13 recommended by the Council in December 2009. However, the bottom-up
approach estimates the cumulated size of individual consolidation measures at
some 5¼% of GDP over 2010-13. It confirms that fiscal consolidation has so far
been more revenue-based but suggests that expenditure savings (beyond
"customary" savings already observed in the past) have also
contributed to improving the general government balance. Thus, the bottom-up
calculation of the discretionary consolidation measures implemented by the
authorities over 2010-13 provides a more positive picture than does the purely
top-down approach based on the structural balance. The deficit is expected
to remain well above the 3% of GDP reference value this year. It is set to
slightly deteriorate in 2014 under the usual no policy change assumption
underpinning the Commission services' forecasts. The
substantial cyclical deterioration in the budgetary position resulting from the
weaker overall position of the economy relative to the macroeconomic scenario
underlying the 2009 Council recommendation and medium-term growth prospects
suggest that extending the deadline for correction of the excessive deficit by
2015 at the latest is appropriate. Granting France two additional years appears commensurate with headline deficit targets of 3.6% of
GDP for 2014 and 2.8% for 2015. The underlying improvement in the structural
budget balance would be 0.8% of GDP both in 2014 and 2015. Table 7 – Comparison of key
macroeconomic and budgetary projections Annex Table A1 – Adjustment of the apparent
fiscal effort for revisions in potential output growth - details of calculation Table A2 – Adjustment of the apparent
fiscal effort for revenue windfalls/shortfalls as compared to standard
elasticities - details of calculation [1] Unless stated otherwise, all
historical data are based on the information available at the cut-off date of
the Commission services' 2013 Spring Forecast. [2] Total current revenue of
general government. [3] See The
cyclically-adjusted budget balance used in the EU fiscal framework: an update,
European Commission, Economic Papers 478, March 2013. [4] For example by the Court of
Auditors, the Inspection générale des finances and the Inspection
générale des affaires sociales. [5] Central government
expenditure excluding interest payments and civil servants' pensions has been
frozen in nominal terms since 2011. This rule comes on top of the zero volume
rule introduced in 2004, which applies to all central government expenditure. [6] Following a top-down approach
suggests that fiscal consolidation has been revenue-driven: based on the
Commission services' 2013 Spring Forecast, the cyclically-adjusted ratio of
revenue to GDP net of one-off measures is estimated to increase from 47¾% in
2009 to 51¼%, while the expenditure ratio is set to remain broadly flat in
structural terms. [7] GDP growth was 1.7% vs.
potential output growth estimated at 1.0%. [8] The local business tax was
paid by companies and essentially based on the rental value of fixed assets. It
was abolished in 2010 and replaced by a new economic contribution for
businesses (contribution économique territoriale or CET) and a flat-rate
tax on network businesses; additional tax revenue was also transferred to local
governments. [9] GDP is
set to decrease by 0.1% vs. potential output growth estimated at 1.0%. [10] Does not equal difference
2013/14 in Table 6 due to rounding effects. [11] The headline targets take
into account one-off measures whose impact on the general government balance is
currently estimated at 0.1% of GDP in 2013 and -0.1% in both 2014 and 2015.