October 20, 2014 - 11:15 AMT
Finance Minister says France to cut deficit at appropriate rate

French Finance Minister Michel Sapin reaffirmed ahead of a meeting in Berlin with his German counterpart on Monday, Oct 20, that France would cut its deficit at a rate appropriate to maintaining a fragile recovery, Reuters reported.

"We must not go all out for deficit reduction, we have to slow it down because we must be in harmony with the needs of the French economy - we must moreover support growth," he told France Info radio.

Sapin reiterated a long-held French view that Germany should lead an effort to boost investment in the eurozone and promised that France would continue to pursue structural reforms.

"We are not going to do a deal along the lines of 'you give me that, and I'll give you this' - it's about what is right for each of us and what is right for Europe," he said of the talks later with German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble.

France confirmed last month it would break a promise to bring its deficit below an EU-mandated ceiling of three percent of output next year. The European Commission is due to decide by the end of this month whether to reject its 2015 budget in what would be an embarrassment for the core EU member.

Economy Minister Emmanuel Macron, who will accompany Sapin on the trip, said at the weekend he was "totally sure" that the EU executive would ultimately not take that step and voiced hopes that Germany and France would see eye to eye on how to boost eurozone recovery.

France expects growth of just 0.4 percent this year, rising to 1.0 percent in 2015.

Photo: Reuters