France unlikely to
achieve 2017 deficit target: fiscal watchdog
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[September 27, 2016]
PARIS
(Reuters) - France is unlikely to meet its 2017 budget deficit target,
the country's independent fiscal watchdog said on Tuesday, casting doubt
on the government's plan to cut the shortfall to less than 3 percent of
output.
The High Council of Public Finance's (HCFP) assessment is a fresh blow
to President Francois Hollande's economic record seven months from a
presidential election that polls suggest he has little chance of winning
if he runs.
On Monday, jobless figures for August showed the biggest jump in the
number of unemployed people for nearly three years.
Scrutinizing the main economic forecasts underpinning the 2017 budget,
the HCFP said the government's deficit reduction plans were "improbable"
because of high risks that spending would be more than planned and
revenues less than hoped.
"Based on the information at its disposal, (the HCFP) considers as
uncertain that the nominal deficit will be brought to less than 3
percent of GDP in 2017," it said in a report issued as Hollande's
government prepares to publish its 2017 budget.
Paris hopes to rebuild its fiscal credibility with its European partners
by targeting a deficit of 2.7 percent of GDP for 2017, the lowest in a
decade and under the EU's limit of 3 percent.
The watchdog said government forecasts for 1.5 percent GDP growth this
year and next were optimistic, noting they were higher than what most
private sector economists expected.
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French President Francois Hollande delivers a speech during a
ceremony to mark the laying of the first stone of the extension of
the port of Calais, France, September 26, 2016. REUTERS/Thibault
Vandermersch/Pool
"The
government's growth outlook, which is based on a number of favorable
assumptions, does not display the caution necessary to best meet public finance
targets and commitments," it said.
(Reporting by Myriam Rivet and Leigh Thomas; Editing by Andrew Callus and Robin
Pomeroy)
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