France budget deficit largest in six months

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UCapital24 Media

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France’s government budget deficit narrowed to EUR 100.4 billion in June 2025, down from EUR 103.5 billion in the same month of the previous year. Although still elevated, this improvement reflects a modest strengthening of the country’s fiscal position amid a complex macroeconomic backdrop.


Notably, the June figure represented the largest monthly budget shortfall since December 2024, underscoring the persistent challenges in aligning expenditure with revenue growth.


The narrowing of the deficit was primarily driven by a combination of restrained public spending and a solid increase in government revenues. Total expenditures declined by 0.6% year-on-year to EUR 262.1 billion, suggesting a degree of spending discipline across key areas of the public sector.


This may reflect reduced outlays on pandemic-related support measures, energy subsidies, or public investment cycles returning to a more normalized pace. At the same time, total revenues grew by 4.2% to EUR 182.5 billion, likely supported by higher tax receipts, improved corporate earnings, and stronger labor market dynamics contributing to income tax and social security inflows.


However, the data also pointed to underlying fiscal pressures. The Treasury special accounts — which capture the balance of inflows and outflows related to earmarked expenditures such as contributions from local governments or dedicated program funding — recorded a shortfall of EUR 20.8 billion.


This was significantly wider than the EUR 14.9 billion gap seen in the same period a year earlier, and may suggest mounting burdens from decentralised programs, delayed reimbursements, or structural imbalances in specific expenditure categories.


Looking ahead, while the year-on-year improvement in the headline deficit is a positive signal for fiscal consolidation efforts, the persistence of high monthly deficits and increased pressure on special accounts highlights the difficulty of achieving long-term budgetary stability.


Fiscal policymakers may need to balance ongoing economic support with medium-term consolidation goals, particularly as debt servicing costs rise in a higher interest rate environment and the European Commission renews scrutiny of member states’ fiscal discipline under reactivated Stability and Growth Pact rules.