信用核付け会社のMOODY'Sは、フランスの国債の信用核付けを最良から1段落とす
Moody’s quita la Triple A a Francia
La agencia atribuye la decisión a los "desafíos estructurales" que afronta el país
Miguel Mora París 20 NOV 2012 - 00:01 CET
Moody's removes France Triple A
The agency attributed the decision to "structural challenges" facing the country
Miguel Mora Paris 20 NOV 2012 - 00:01 CET
Many analysts were waiting for days. Moody's has met late Monday with forecasts and downgraded one notch the highest rating of the French debt. The loss of the triple A determined by Moody's, in addition to which ordered his mate and rival Standard & Poor's for ten months, when Nicolas Sarkozy was still in the Elysee, comes at a time of great uncertainty about the economy and competitiveness galas.
In recent weeks, several analysts and voices from Germany, Brussels and the International Monetary Fund have launched urgent recommendations to Paris and structural reforms demanded President François Hollande, the only center-left president who leads a large European Union country.
"The main reason is the risk that economic growth suffers (...) due to persistent structural challenges facing the country," said the agency in a statement. The rating, which leaves the note in AA1, threat to France again lower its credit rating in the medium term.
moreFeature: The Guns point to ParisMarkets open in red after the devaluation of the French memo
Economy Minister, Pierre Moscovici, has reacted to the news by saying that it is a downgrade "punishing past management" and "encourages the Government to undertake the necessary reforms quickly." Some economists believe that the decision will have a limited effect on the low interest rates you pay today France to fund a debt that already exceeds 90% of GDP.
Hollande has recently presented an ambitious Plan for Competitiveness, with tax breaks to companies that lighten workloads employers, and is currently negotiating with the social labor market reform. Their efforts have served to reassure its partners, who think that France could be next year the next domino in the European crisis. Lars Feld, director of the Walter Eucken Institute in Freiburg and member of the committee of experts that advises Angela Merkel said last week that "the biggest current problem in the eurozone is not Greece and even Spain and Italy: is France, which has done nothing to restore competitiveness and is even going in the opposite direction. "
"France needs reforms in the labor market," said the sage, "the euro is the country where people work fewer hours per year." Socialists believe that criticism and pressure should have come long ago, when Sarkozy was in power. And try to appear effective, dialogical and flexible to avoid the feeling that the agencies and the booklet markets impose neoliberal applied to "sick country" of southern Europe.
0 件のコメント:
コメントを投稿