logo
French budget minister warns of IMF, EU oversight risk

French budget minister warns of IMF, EU oversight risk

Reuters2 days ago

PARIS, June 10 (Reuters) - France must put its finances into order or face the risk of being placed under the supervision of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) or of European institutions, Budget Minister Amelie de Montchalin said on Tuesday.
"Today, we need to seize the budgetary weapon again, get our house in order, and put it back in order, because if we don't, others will decide for us," Montchalin told RTL radio.
"There is a risk of supervision by international institutions, European institutions, our creditors," she added when asked if France faced a risk of supervision by the IMF.
French Prime Minister Francois Bayrou plans to unveil proposals in July to get public finances under control, hoping to push through a 40-billion-euro ($45.62 billion) budget squeeze in 2026.
France has a long history of flouting EU overspending rules and is currently running the biggest public sector deficit in the euro zone, at an estimated 5.4% of economic output this year.
($1 = 0.8768 euros)

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Unruly travellers to be hit with fine amid clampdown on ‘air rage'
Unruly travellers to be hit with fine amid clampdown on ‘air rage'

The Independent

time23 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Unruly travellers to be hit with fine amid clampdown on ‘air rage'

Ryanair will fine passengers £500 if they are offloaded from a flight due to misconduct. The airline is amending its terms and conditions to include the warning and will take the fine from the card used for booking or any Ryanair vouchers. Ryanair says it reserves the right to recover additional costs, damages, or liabilities resulting from passengers' actions. Earlier this year, Ryanair filed legal proceedings against a passenger who disrupted a flight, seeking over €3,000 in damages and imposing a five-year ban. Ryanair CEO Michael O'Leary has called for a two-drink limit at airports due to a rise in air rage incidents.

Thousands of Poundland jobs at risk as shops to close after company sold
Thousands of Poundland jobs at risk as shops to close after company sold

Sky News

time37 minutes ago

  • Sky News

Thousands of Poundland jobs at risk as shops to close after company sold

Thousands of jobs are at risk after discount high street chain Poundland was sold - with dozens of shops expected to shut. Poundland has been sold for a headline figure of €1 to investment firm and former Laura Ashley owners Gordon Brothers, confirming Sky News reporting. Its previous owners, the Poland-based Pepco Group, however, are to be repaid tens of millions of pounds as part of the sale. Poundland employs roughly 16,000 people across an estate of over 800 shops in the UK and Ireland. Around 100 stores are expected to close, and rent reviews are also expected to be negotiated with Poundland landlords. The chain, known for selling products for £1, was put on the market earlier this year after a downturn in trading. Employers' tax hikes announced by Chancellor Rachel Reeves in the November budget increased the financial pressure on high street retailers. As part of the deal, a restructuring plan requiring High Court approval will take place. Details of that restructuring will be communicated in "due course", owners Pepco said. It will retain a minority stake in Poundland. Pepco said the deal would help it shift away from food and drinks, improve its revenue growth and boost its profitability Stephan Borchert, Pepco Group's chief executive, said: "This transaction will strongly support our accelerated value creation programme by simplifying the group and focusing on our successful Pepco business.

Sale appoint ex-Italy lock Bortolami as head coach
Sale appoint ex-Italy lock Bortolami as head coach

BBC News

time38 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Sale appoint ex-Italy lock Bortolami as head coach

Sale Sharks have appointed Marco Bortolami as head coach to work alongside director of rugby Alex Sanderson. The ex-Italy forward replaces Paul Deacon, who left the club on Wednesday after holding the role since 45, has been head coach of United Rugby Championship (URC) club Benetton for the past four former captain won 111 caps during a playing career which included four years in the Premiership with Gloucester."I'm really excited and honoured to be part of this family," Bortolami told the club's website. "The club has been building for the last few years and to have the chance now to come and contribute is unbelievable." Sale finished third in the Premiership, losing at Leicester Tigers in their play-off semi-final on was the fourth time in the past five seasons the Sharks have finished in the top four, but they have not been champions since Bortolami will bring his experience to the coaching team, having worked at Benetton since he retired from playing in 2016, firstly as an assistant before taking the top Sanderson, having someone of Bortolami's stature can help the club's push to take that next step."This is a huge coup for the club because Marco is an international-level coach," he said."But that's the level that our coaching needs to be at because that's the kind of team we've got here."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store