
French PM François Bayrou submitted his resignation on Tuesday after losing a confidence vote in parliament. He had gambled on a budget demanding over €40 billion in savings. The plan would have frozen welfare benefits, cut civil-service jobs and scrapped two public holidays. President Emmanuel Macron then named Sébastien Lecornu, a longtime ally, as France’s new prime minister to pick up the mantle of trying to pass a budget through a divided parliament. So where does the country’s economy stand now? Charles Pellegrin discusses this and more with Alexandra Roulet, associate professor of economics at INSEAD.
Trending
- Best and worst hotel chains ranked by cost and customer score | Money News
- EV drivers could face new tax in Budget
- New ‘brain atlases’ may change fight against Alzheimer’s, MS – DW – 11/05/2025
- Tech giants warn Reeves of IPO ‘flight risk’ over budget | Money News
- ‘Vibe coding’ named word of the year by Collins Dictionary
- ‘Wetenschappers met belangen in afslankindustrie beïnvloeden obesitasdebat’
- Leeds maternity inquiry must include care culture, says father
- FIFA unveils new Peace Prize ahead of 2026 World Cup draw in Washington
