French Prime Minister Edouard Philippe announced plans today to tame public spending and bring down the country's "intolerable" public debt, warning the country was "dancing on a volcano".
France's 2.147 trillion-euro debt makes the eurozone's second-biggest economy vulnerable to speculation, he said in his first general policy speech to parliament.
"We are dancing on a volcano that is rumbling ever louder," he said, announcing plans to wean the French off their "addiction" to public spending.
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Philippe said the savings would be achieved by controlling the public sector wage bill, scrapping all tax loopholes and adopting a more results-driven approach to spending in areas such as housing and professional training.
He also pledged to slash corporate taxes to make France more attractive to investors.
"France cannot remain the champion both of public spending and taxes," the centrist premier said.
"Businesses must want to set up and develop on our territory rather than elsewhere," he told lawmakers, announcing a progressive lowering of the corporation tax rate from 33.3 percent to 25 percent by 2022.
He also reiterated the government's ambition of bringing the deficit within an EU limit of 3.0 percent of GDP this year.
Philippe, who heads a government drawn from the centre, left and right of the spectrum, also announced "a grand investment plan" worth 50 billion euros ($56.7 billion) in areas including the environment, health, agriculture and transport.
Stressing the importance of "investing in the sectors of the future", Philippe told parliament that the package would also focus on developing skills.
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