Less than a week after the new French government was announced, major journals in the country are listing the challenges ahead for Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne’s team. In addition to the economic issues presented as a priority in the face of a purchasing power crisis plaguing the public, this new administration also promises to be stigmatized with environmental guidelines by mobilizing many members of the government.
Less than a week after the new French government was announced, major journals in the country are listing the challenges ahead for Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne’s team. In addition to the economic issues presented as a priority in the face of a purchasing power crisis plaguing the public, this new administration also promises to be stigmatized with environmental guidelines by mobilizing many members of the government.
With the headline “The great economic crisis that threatens us,” Le Point sets the tone for the French government’s expectations. The weekly brings a great report on inflation and recession affecting much of the world, and tries to explain the impact of this not-so-optimistic scenario in France.
“We thought 2022 would be a continuation of 2021, the year of economic recovery with 7% growth in the country,” summarizes the text. But that wasn’t to mention the geopolitical aspects that have shaken a less stable context than it seems. “The war in Ukraine and the economic sanctions against Russia threw hot oil into a calming fire. In an instant, raw material, energy and food prices flared up,” he says. Le point.
Faced with this scenario, the new French government has two challenges: reducing unemployment and increasing the purchasing power of the population in a stagnant growth country. “Élisabeth Borne will need all her experience with a former Minister of Labor to navigate the murky waters of the French economy,” the report states.
Also, as L’Express magazine noted, this new government still faces the challenge of proving that it can improve the country’s economy and be ecological at the same time. To that end, not one but two ministers will focus their efforts on environmental issues: Amélie de Montchalin and Energetic Transition and Agnès Pannier Runacher, who have taken over the Ecological Transition and Regional Planning portfolio. On top of that, the prime minister will lead what Macron calls Ecological Planning.
However, none of the three have concrete experience in ecological matters and both ministers have a clearly “liberal and pragmatic” profile, which worries some environmental NGOs. L’Obs magazine, which also carries an important report on the ecological challenges of Macron’s second term, goes further, saying that the two “pro-business” ministers have never had any environmental engagement in their careers.
But L’Obs In his victory speech, Macron recalls that the president himself, during his first administration, did not waste ecological explanations, even if he promised to transform France into a “great ecological nation”. Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro criticizes the administration for protecting the Amazon, saying that many of the environmental promises Macron made in his first term did not have tangible results.
source: Noticias