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The Most Despised Tax-And-Retreat French President Sinks Deeper Into Economic Quagmire

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Wolf Richter   www.testosteronepit.com   www.amazon.com/author/wolfrichter

The French habitually appear to be on the verge of having had it. But the incidents have been getting denser, more frequent. There were the protests in the Bretagne and elsewhere, followed by "operation snail" where 2,100 heavy trucks drove side by side down major expressways at a snail’s pace, with everyone behind them going nuts. Every day, there are protests organized by different organizations. On Thursday, the farmers went to town, to Paris more specifically. They were getting there by driving their tractors on major highways, setting up roadblocks as they went, snarling traffic for miles.

They’re all protesting the relentless onslaught of new taxes. At first, buoyant from an election victory, President François Hollande and his government went after the rich then quickly hit even modest households, farmers, truckers, craftsmen, everyone who does or buys anything. Because it’s never enough. In January, the Value Added Tax hike will take effect. For the top tier of items, the VAT will only increase from 19.6% to 20%. But for some of the lower tier items, it will be jacked up massively. For example, for the equestrian industry, the VAT will jump from 7% to 20% – hence the protests the other day.

Now the farmers have had it. While at it, they’re also protesting EU rules on how they should run their businesses and anti-pollution laws that would limit the use of tractors on some days. The word "insurrection" is showing up in the media, though it's still more an exaggeration than a description. "Fiscal discontent” is better, but not broad enough.

After 18 months in office, Hollande's ratings have plunged to the lowest levels of any president since 1958, according to an Ifop/JDD poll, the only poll going back this far. A mere 20% of the French were satisfied with him; 17% among workers and employees; 15% among merchants and craftsmen. Even his erstwhile supporters have abandoned him.

And 79% were dissatisfied. Cited were "social desperation" of the people affected by his policies, but also his leadership qualities, his apparent "inability to decide," his "lack of discipline," his tendency to make decisions and then, when the volume gets too loud, withdraw them. It leaves the country rudderless.

Who could do a better job? Maybe Santa Claus.

Because no one else seems to be able to, in the eyes of the French. Turns out, 74% think that any of the major figures of the UMP, the party of former President Sarkozy, would do worse or no better. And on the right-wing where Marine Le Pen reigns with her National Front (FN)? 79% of the respondents think she’d be worse or no better than Hollande. There simply is no savior in sight. Much less a solution.

Spending by the government accounts for more than 56% of GDP, the highest in the Eurozone. Even thinking about cutting these outlays would be political hara-kiri. To fund this public mastodon and bring the deficit down to 3% of GDP by 2015, and into compliance with EU stability criteria – it would require a miracle – taxes must be extracted from everyone and everything in the anemic private sector.

But the math just shot craps.

Despite incessant tax increases, the government just confessed that revenues would be about €11 billion less than expected. The shortfall was spread over VAT, income taxes, and corporate taxes. French pundits are now talking about “fiscal saturation,” the point where raising taxes will lead to lower tax revenues, as struggling households and businesses will jump through hoops to limit the taxes they pay. They might work off the record, cut back on purchases, or move business entities to other countries. One of many brutal disappointments for Hollande. Nothing seems to work. Squeezing the French has reached its limit.

French businesses already pay a total of 64.7% of their pre-tax income in taxes, according to the just released report by the World Bank and PwC (PDF). The report compared 189 countries and measured total taxes paid in 2012 – including income taxes, payroll taxes, employer paid “social" taxes for healthcare and retirement systems, real estate taxes, capital gains taxes, etc. – as a percent of pretax profit. France’s total was the second highest in the EU, after another economic star, Italy, and far above the EU average of 43.1% and the worldwide average of 41.1%.

In France, labor is taxed the most, with employers paying breath-taking 51.7% of their pretax profit in payroll taxes, the worst in the EU and possibly in the universe. Income taxes eat up only 8.7% in pretax profits. As anywhere, sagging profits and a myriad of deductions, loopholes, credits, and other devices allow most companies to get around high tax rates. “Other” taxes consumed another 4.3% of pretax profits.

Confiscatory payroll taxes do one thing very well: stop job creation in its tracks.

Companies are hurting. Of the 15,000 privately held companies that a recent study by accounting and audit association ATH analyzed, 20% lost money in 2012. Over the period between 2008 and 2012, revenues inched up a total of 7%, not even enough to keep up with inflation (8.8%). Net profits plunged 18% during that time. This “permanent degradation” is endangering the survival of many of these companies and is crimping “the investments necessary for the competitiveness and sustainability of these companies," the report observed.

Driven to desperation by the morose economy, the abysmal poll numbers, the tax quagmire, and mounting anger on the street, Hollande’s government is going to attack the problem decisively and head on: another tax reform! This time, Prime Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault wants to start from scratch. A mega project would take up the remaining three and a half years of Hollande’s term. Hope? In the same breath, he said that it would be revenue neutral! They just don’t get it.

Revenue neutral isn't going to help the economy. Households and smaller businesses need room to breathe. Yet, bad as it is, no one believes it. Because in France, taxes have the insidious habit of creeping up relentlessly.

These are among France’s real problems. But now France's Financial Markets Authority decided to hound bloggers who’d dared to doubt the veracity of the sacred balance sheets of the even more sacred French megabanks – including Mike “Mish” Shedlock in the US. It’s getting curiouser and curiouser. Read.... Gagging Doubt: French Crackdown On (American) Bloggers Who Question Megabank Balance Sheets

 

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Sat, 11/23/2013 - 13:35 | 4183616 FeralSerf
FeralSerf's picture

The poor I know are not "sitting on their ass at home not doing jack shit".  They're working two or three part time jobs at minimum wage (or less) trying to feed their kids and pay rent.   I don't consider that a "definition of another form of 'rich'"

The "poor"  you are referring to are the ones that have already given up and are doing a lifetime sentence in America's glorious penal system, either inside or outside the official prison wall.  A seat in front of the Elites' media box is just another form of prison, whether you wish to acknowledge it or not.

America's poor have become mostly just tools of the Elites.  And, like most cheap tools, they are discarded -- thrown on America's penal system trash heaps -- when they are no longer useful.

Sat, 11/23/2013 - 08:56 | 4183322 rwe2late
rwe2late's picture

 The wealthy elite also co-opt (the old terminology) many in the middle class as well.

It is the middle class, not the poor, who are the mid-level managers, the financial gurus, the computer 'nerds', the accountants, the police captains and above, the weapons designers, the media pundits, etc.

in both the public and private sectors.

Again, the main flow of wealth and power is upward concentrated in a very few hands and the organizations those hands control.

Fri, 11/22/2013 - 20:19 | 4182681 bilejones
bilejones's picture

The underclass is paid a pitiful subsistence in return for their support for the elite's continuing looting of the middle class.

Sat, 11/23/2013 - 00:25 | 4183118 disabledvet
disabledvet's picture

see below. we're not the same as France. We've been dealing with the problem of nuclear power a lot longer...and yes, we have been dealing with it...from both ends actually (decommissioning which is an incredibly expensive and complex process...and now from the private sector side creating "Solar Cities" meaning an alternative to the nuclear complex and "price spikes.") my personal view is that the battery has already been created...buying and owning the ICE complex is a fools errand now...it's just a matter of time (next year?) before the whole thing goes kaput. saw my first Tesla today...can't wait to see a million more.

Fri, 11/22/2013 - 15:51 | 4181937 0b1knob
0b1knob's picture

“fiscal saturation,” the point where raising taxes will lead to lower tax revenues

Somewhere Laffer is laughing....

Fri, 11/22/2013 - 15:39 | 4181893 Charles Wilson
Charles Wilson's picture

Remember, there is no reasoning to a Leftist.  All that matters is Class Membership and Class Analysis.

Hollande does not care, the Politburo doesn't care, no one cares.

Onward! To socialism!

"'N could you try to step over that body over there?  He was from an inauthentic Class and we don't know what diseases he was carrying.

He gave his life for the Cause."

Fri, 11/22/2013 - 17:29 | 4182311 Ying-Yang
Ying-Yang's picture

"for the equestrian industry, the VAT will jump from 7% to 20%"

So.... in January the French that ride their meat will see an increase of 285% in VAT tax.

"That's Horsish"

Sat, 11/23/2013 - 01:39 | 4183169 G-R-U-N-T
G-R-U-N-T's picture

"And 79% were dissatisfied. Cited were "social desperation" of the people affected by his policies, but also his leadership qualities, his apparent "inability to decide," his "lack of discipline," his tendency to make decisions and then, when the volume gets too loud, withdraw them. It leaves the country rudderless."

Sounds like Obama, two peas from the same pod!

 

Fri, 11/22/2013 - 18:29 | 4182453 Doubleguns
Doubleguns's picture
“The art of taxation consists in so plucking the goose as to obtain the largest possible amount of feathers with the smallest possible amount of hissing”

Jean Baptiste Colbert

 

Seems the french have to learn this lesson over again. 

 

Fri, 11/22/2013 - 20:54 | 4182754 Anusocracy
Anusocracy's picture

France would probably be a very rich country if it weren't aspiring to be the Cuba of Europe.

Countries would be far better off if they just rejected their forager or pharaonic operating systems.

Sat, 11/23/2013 - 05:27 | 4183265 wintermute
wintermute's picture

This expose by a French public servant shows how the mastodon is dying on its feet.

On the first morning in her first job at the regional council of Aquitaine, she immediately felt there was something very wrong. Her first task took her an hour, but she was told it was a week's work.

"It was a sheer waste of time. There are plenty of people and not enough work. So there are a lot of people who have nothing to do," she says. "They go on Facebook, they chat, they go to endless meetings and spend a lot of their day complaining about being overworked."

 

http://www.theguardian.com/world/2011/mar/23/french-civil-servant-bored-workforce

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