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    Home > Finance > French 2025 budget targets 50 billion euros in savings, finance minister says
    Finance

    French 2025 budget targets 50 billion euros in savings, finance minister says

    Published by Global Banking & Finance Review®

    Posted on January 24, 2025

    2 min read

    Last updated: January 27, 2026

    An image of Finance Minister Eric Lombard addressing the media about the French government's 2025 budget targets, aiming to achieve 50 billion euros in savings while supporting economic growth.
    Finance Minister Eric Lombard discusses French 2025 budget savings - Global Banking & Finance Review
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    Quick Summary

    France's 2025 budget aims for €50 billion in savings with a deficit target of 5-5.5% GDP, seeking support to avoid past failures.

    France Aims for €50 Billion Savings in 2025 Budget

    PARIS (Reuters) -France's new government aims to squeeze around 50 billion euros ($52 billion) in savings out of the 2025 budget, Finance Minister Eric Lombard said on Monday, setting a lower target than his predecessor.

    Lombard said that an easier belt-tightening effort was necessary in order to preserve economic growth, adding the budget bill currently being drafted would target a deficit in a range of 5.0% to 5.5% of gross domestic product (GDP).

    The previous government, which collapsed last month after opposition parties rejected part of its 2025 budget, had hoped to reduce the deficit to 5% this year from 6.1% in 2024.

    "We have to support the economy. I'm thinking about companies that are lacking confidence, we can't hold growth back," Lombard told France Inter radio.

    Lombard began consultations with opposition parties on Monday in an effort to preemptively win support before proposing the new budget bill in hope of avoiding a no-confidence vote like the one that brought down the previous government in early December amid a backlash against its belt-tightening proposals.

    France's failure to pass a 2025 budget has spooked investors and ratings agencies, but the savings needed to get France's public finances in line have proven too much for lawmakers in the deeply divided parliament. The previous government headed by Michel Barnier had targeted savings totalling 60 billion euros.

    To pass its budget, the new government will likely need support in particular from the Socialists, who have been pushing for higher taxes on the wealthy and on big companies.

    Lombard said the new bill would not create new taxes that were not already in the failed budget but that it would rework a planned additional tax on France's biggest companies with the aim of bringing in about 8 billion euros as well as a tax hike on the wealthiest taxpayers.

    He added he was open to increasing a 30% flat tax on capital gains and income introduced by President Emmanuel Macron in 2018 to make France more attractive to global investors. The flat tax spurred criticism of Macron as a president for the rich.

    ($1 = 0.9678 euros)

    (Reporting by Dominique Vidalon and Leigh Thomas;Editing by Sudip Kar-Gupta and Gareth Jones)

    Key Takeaways

    • •France targets €50 billion savings in 2025 budget.
    • •Deficit goal set between 5% and 5.5% of GDP.
    • •Previous government's budget failed, leading to collapse.
    • •New budget seeks support from opposition parties.
    • •Potential tax changes on wealthy and big companies.

    Frequently Asked Questions about French 2025 budget targets 50 billion euros in savings, finance minister says

    1What is the main topic?

    The main topic is France's 2025 budget plan targeting €50 billion in savings and a deficit of 5-5.5% GDP.

    2Why did the previous government collapse?

    The previous government collapsed after failing to pass the 2025 budget due to opposition rejection.

    3What changes are proposed in the new budget?

    The new budget proposes savings, potential tax changes on wealthy individuals and big companies, and aims to avoid new taxes.

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