Le Maire added it wold cost France several billion euros to pay
back its debt to the market, which showed that importance of
sticking to a "balanced and coherent" fiscal policy.
U.S. equities tumbled on Monday, with the S&P 500 confirming it
is in a bear market, as fears grow that the expected aggressive
interest rate hikes by the Federal Reserve would push the
economy into a recession. [.N]
Last week, the European Central Bank (ECB) ended a long-running
stimulus scheme and said it would deliver next month its first
interest rate hike since 2011, followed by a potentially larger
move in September.
The ECB, facing a euro zone inflation at a record-high of 8.1%
and which is still rising, now fears that price growth is
broadening out and could morph into a hard-to-break wage-price
spiral, heralding a new era of stubbornly higher prices.
Data published last month showed the French economy unexpectedly
shrank in the first quarter as consumers struggled to cope with
surging inflation that reached a record-high rate of 5.8% over
12 months in May.
Nevertheless, Le Maire has said he expects France to have
positive economic growth for 2022.
(Reporting by Tassilo Hummel; Editing by Sudip Kar-Gupta)
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