Overseas France: A temporary price cut will not suffice

Economist Sabine Garabedian argues in a Le Monde op-ed that price reduction measures in overseas France won't address the cost of living without boosting living standards. The new bill, adopted on October 28, aims to enhance purchasing power but remains piecemeal. Price gaps obscure a deeper divide with mainland France.

The issue of high living costs in French overseas departments resurfaces often, with public policies failing to address its deep roots. The October 28 bill seeks to boost purchasing power through price cuts, but Sabine Garabedian highlights their limitations. Prices there average 13% higher than in mainland France, while living standards lag 40% behind, producing a 'scissors effect' of high spending and low incomes.

Prices will stay structurally elevated for both imported and local goods, due to steep supply costs, narrow domestic markets, and an economy of small businesses unable to achieve scale economies. Oligopolies exist in the Antilles and Réunion, where a few groups control over 40% of markets, but reports show no excessive margins. Multiple players—transporters, importers, distributors—add their markups along the supply chain.

The starkest disparities hit food, up to +41% in the Antilles. The 'quality-price shield' targets this area, which makes up 70% of the basket in Réunion and 43% in Guadeloupe, versus just 15% in a standard consumption basket. Garabedian stresses: 'As long as living standards do not improve, a temporary price cut will not suffice to reverse the trend.' Solutions like regional cooperation and food self-sufficiency are mentioned, but focus must shift to raising incomes for true equality.

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Heated debates in the French National Assembly over the 2026 budget, with politicians discussing amendments and tax increases.
صورة مولدة بواسطة الذكاء الاصطناعي

Intense debates begin on France's 2026 budget in parliament

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي صورة مولدة بواسطة الذكاء الاصطناعي

Debates on France's 2026 budget project promise to be fierce in the National Assembly, with over 1,700 amendments filed for the revenues section. Budget rapporteur Philippe Juvin sharply criticizes the planned tax increases and calls for cuts in public spending. The finance committee review begins on Monday, October 20, in a tight schedule.

Despite statistical gains, purchasing power remains the French public's top worry for 2026 per the recent Odoxa poll for Le Figaro—outranking insecurity and immigration. In response, new Minister Serge Papin proposes tax-free withdrawals from company savings plans for low-wage earners.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

Starting January 1, 2026, France implements a range of measures impacting personal finances, housing, transport, and the environment, amid the lack of an adopted state budget. Key adjustments include a 0.9% increase in basic pensions, the suspension of the MaPrimeRénov’ scheme, and price rises for gas and postal packages.

The 2026 finance bill was passed using Article 49.3 of the Constitution, despite the Prime Minister's initial promise against it. The public deficit is projected at 5% of GDP, down from 5.4% in 2025, exceeding 150 billion euros overall. This amounts to an average of 3614 euros per one of the 41.5 million fiscal households.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

Serge Papin, the junior minister for Commerce and Purchasing Power, has proposed allowing employees earning less than two times the minimum wage to withdraw up to 2,000 euros from their company savings plans tax-free. The measure aims to boost consumption amid economic gloom. The amount could rise during parliamentary debates.

Following Parliament's unanimous adoption of a special finance law on December 23, 2025, to bridge funding amid failed 2026 budget talks, Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu insists a compromise remains possible in January. Yet, the measure—echoing last year's—prolongs uncertainty rooted in the June 2024 National Assembly dissolution, with significant fiscal and political costs.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

During the 2026 budget review, French National Assembly deputies adopted an LFI amendment Tuesday evening to tax profits actually realized by multinationals in France, estimated at 26 billion euros by supporters. Backed by a left-RN alliance, it follows the doubling of the GAFA tax from 3% to 6%, despite strong government opposition decrying fiscal overbidding. These votes could yield over 20 billion euros for the state but may be overturned in the Senate.

 

 

 

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