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						French manufacturers 
						expect investment to stall in 2017 
						
		 
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		 [November 08, 2016] 
		By Michel Rose 
		 
		
		PARIS 
		(Reuters) - Executives at French manufacturers plan to hold off on 
		increasing investment next year after three consecutive years of higher 
		spending, a survey showed on Tuesday, hindering the government's hopes 
		for a strengthening recovery. 
		 
		Economists consider the survey by the INSEE statistics office a 
		bellwether of corporate investment intentions. It is closely watched by 
		the government, which is banking on a turnaround in business investment 
		to fuel a recovery in the euro zone's second-biggest economy. 
		 
		In their first assessment of next year's plans, manufacturers polled in 
		October said they intended to leave spending in 2017 at the same level 
		as this year, dragged down by gloomy expectations in the transport 
		sector. 
		 
		That would mark a significant slowdown from the 5 percent increase 
		manufacturers expect for this year. The estimate had itself been lowered 
		from 6 percent the last time the survey was conducted in August. 
		 
		The new survey will cast doubt on the Socialist government's 1.5 percent 
		target for economic growth next year, on which it based its last budget 
		bill before the 2017 presidential election. 
		 
		Finance Minister Michel Sapin had already had to admit last month that 
		the government would not meet its growth target for this year, also set 
		at 1.5 percent, after third-quarter gross domestic product data 
		undershot expectations. 
		 
		Some economists said it was still too early to draw conclusions from the 
		investment survey, even though the overall reading was weak. 
						
		  
			
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		Coe-Rexecode economist Denis Ferrand said at the same time last year, 
		manufacturers planned a 3 percent rise in investment spending for 2016, 
		which was later raised. 
			
		
		"In all likelihood, business investment will remain tilted to the 
		upside, but with no new impetus," he told Reuters. He expects economic 
		growth to reach only 1.1 percent in 2017. 
		 
		INSEE also said the 2017 estimate was based on a response rate of 
		two-thirds among polled executives, compared with a 90 percent rate for 
		2016 expectations, in a sign manufacturers' have yet to draw up 
		definitive plans. 
			
		
		  
			
		
		Investment in manufacturing accounts for a quarter of all business 
		investment spending, which itself represents 12 percent of GDP. 
		 
		The survey came as the customs office separately said France's trade 
		deficit had widened in September, with French exports of cars, 
		pharmaceutical and agricultural products all flagging. 
		 
		(Reporting by Michel Rose; Editing by Larry King) 
				 
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