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France Rules Out Broad Energy Aid Despite Lower Deficit

  • PM dismisses calls for fuel tax cuts, broad subsidies
  • Deficit fell to 5.1% of GDP in 2025, better than forecast
  • Ministers warn blanket price caps are costly, ineffective
  • Some ​financial aid announced for farming, fishing, transport sectors

PARIS, March 27 (Reuters) - French Prime Minister Sebastien Lecornu ruled out on Friday using any fiscal leeway from a better-than-expected budget deficit to provide broad financial support to shield businesses or consumers from rising energy prices.

Lecornu's minority government is under pressure from ​opposition parties to roll out fuel tax cuts and other costly measures to cushion the ​impact of higher oil and gas prices triggered by the war with Iran.

France's statistics ⁠agency INSEE said earlier that the 2025 public accounts showed a fiscal shortfall of 5.1% of economic output, ​down from 5.8% in 2024 and better than the government's last estimate of 5.4%.

"I've seen here and ​there that some people are saying there's a windfall. There is no windfall when you're running a 5.1% deficit," Lecornu told a meeting at the finance ministry.

TARGETED AND TEMPORARY SUPPORT

Lecornu said any support measures had to target sectors most ​in need and be renewed on a monthly basis, marking a sharp contrast with sweeping energy ​price caps that badly strained public finances after Russia's 2022 invasion of Ukraine.

Budget Minister David Amiel said after ‌the meeting ⁠that the cost of existing support measures – which so far have focused on farmers, transport firms and the fishing industry – would be fully offset by spending cuts elsewhere.

The French government said its aid measures included 50 million euros ($57.6 million) of aid for the transport sector, which would equate to a 20 ​euro cents handout for ​small transport firms.

It also ⁠announced 14 million euros of aid for the farming sector and five million for the French fishing industry.

FISCAL RESTRAINT

INSEE said public sector spending grew by 2.5%, ​slowing from 4% in 2024 and eased by lower inflation. Revenue growth ​accelerated to 3.9% ⁠from 3.2%, as a result of tax increases.

The government aims to cut the budget deficit this year to 5.0% as part of a broader plan to bring it back into line with the European Union’s 3% ceiling ⁠by 2029.

INSEE ​also said that France's public debt stood at 115.6% of ​GDP in 2025, compared to 112.6% in 2024 and the government's expectation of 115.9% in 2025.

($1 = 0.8687 euros)

Reporting by Alessandro Parodi ​and Leigh Thomas, additional reporting by Inti Landauro, Editing by Shri Navaratnam, Aidan Lewis and Louise Heavens

Source: Reuters


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