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France unveils big budget as virus cases worsen

By AFP - Sep 28,2020 - Last updated at Sep 28,2020

PARIS — France launched a free-spending budget plan on Monday, saying a fresh spike in new Covid-19 cases justified its unprecedented loosening of the purse strings.

After 460 billion euros ($537 billion) of emergency spending this year to save the economy from the virus fallout, the government built its 2021 budget plan around a 100-billion "recovery plan", first announced this month and partly funded by EU money.

The budget came after France's health services on Saturday reported 14,412 new virus cases over the previous 24 hours — only slightly lower than the record 16,000 registered on both Thursday and Friday.

The fresh spike threatens to overwhelm hospitals, health officials warned, while the government imposed fresh curbs to limit the spread of the virus, including on restaurants, bars and sports facilities.

"There is no reason to give up the idea of a recovery just because the health difficulties have re-emerged," Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire told a news conference.

The spending boost is to help the French economy to rebound strongly next year, by eight per cent according to the budget, after crashing by an expected 10 per cent this year, Le Maire said.

"We are implementing this recovery fund so it can be used up quickly and have the greatest possible impact on growth," he said.

But the growth forecast immediately drew criticism from France's high council for public finance, a state body charged with making sure that government budgetary assumptions are realistic.

The growth target was "pro-active", given the "great uncertainties" weighing on the economic outlook because of the coronavirus, the council said.

It also called on the government to be mindful of public debt which has ballooned out of recognition since the start of the crisis.

France's annual deficit is estimated at 10.2 per cent of gross domestic product this year, and is to come in at 6.7 per cent in 2021, the government said.

This compares with a permitted ceiling of three per cent for eurozone countries, which the EU has, however, lifted temporarily as governments grapple with the crisis.

The government has promised that it will not raise taxes to pay for the recovery.

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