"The French economy is underperforming. Over the last twenty years, its level of growth has been consistently below the EU average. In cumulative terms, the EU grew by 27 percent between 2005 and 2024, whereas France stood at 23 percent. Only Greece, Italy, Portugal, and Finland fared worse.

These figures stand in sharp contrast with the expectations raised by the election of Emmanuel Macron in 2017. The Economist marked this event by claiming that “corporate Europe is giddy with optimism.” The magazine’s cover depicted the newly elected French president, who had held the position of finance minister from 2014 to 2016, as a man walking on water who was carrying the hopes of “France, Europe and centrists everywhere” on his shoulders.

While his neoliberal program was hardly original, Macron’s victory still represented a powerful signal: The supposedly French anti-business exception would come to a definitive end and provide momentum to centrist policies that had come under strain elsewhere since the global financial crisis. This narrative could not be further from the truth: Under Macron’s presidency, French corporate welfare reached new heights while the country became increasingly authoritarian.

With the rise of neoliberalism, French state capitalism has experienced a far-reaching transformation. While postwar dirigisme, based on nationalized firms, state-controlled credit, and expansive regulatory policies, has been thoroughly dismantled, the French state did not retreat from the economy. Rather, its interventions evolved toward forms of corporate welfare. This phenomenon clearly stands out from delving into the country’s public finances."

https://jacobin.com/2026/06/macron-france-corporate-welfare-state

#France #Macron #Rentism #CorporateWelfare #Oligopolies

Emmanuel Macron Has Boosted France’s Corporate Welfare State

French capitalism has been underperforming for decades, but its companies still expect to receive generous state support without giving much in return. Emmanuel Macron has carried this policy of corporate welfare to new heights.

"In order to measure the importance of this phenomenon, we calculate a ratio of public support for the private economy by relating the transfers of public money to investment spending by non-financial firms. Postwar Fordism was characterized by a high investment rate and a low public-support ratio, whereas French neoliberalism turns this pattern on its head with low investment and high public financial support.

Until the end of the 1980s, public support represented less than 10 percent of investment spending by firms. The ratio had already risen substantially before the 2008 crisis, fluctuating between 15 percent and 19 percent. Since then, the figure has climbed well above the 20 percent threshold, and even reached 33 percent in 2020.

During the dirigiste period of Fordism, the state could direct economic activity through the nationalized sector, and firms had high investment rates despite low public funding. In contrast, today’s economy is marked by low public macroeconomic control despite unprecedented state funding.

The power to decide on the allocation of capital is entirely in the hands of corporate boards, even though the state provides them with unprecedented funding."