France to mobilize 45 billion euros as economy slumps 1% in 2020

Le Maire stated that a large part of the 45 billion euro figure was the deferral of all tax payments and payroll charges which companies were due to pay this month

France will mobilize 45 billion euros ($50.22 billion) in crisis measures to help its companies, with the economy expected to contract one percent this year due to the coronavirus outbreak, Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire said on Tuesday.

Le Maire said a large part of the 45 billion euro figure was the deferral of all tax payments and payroll charges that companies were due to pay this month and the cancellation of such payments for firms at risk of collapse.

Economy expected to contract 1% this year due to coronavirus outbreak

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"We are going to mobilize 45 billion euros as our first immediate economic assistance to companies," Le Maire told French RTL radio. "We don't want bankruptcies." The money comes in addition to 300 billion euros in government loan guarantees that President Emmanuel Macron announced on Monday, Le Maire said. He said he would produce a new budget bill "in a matter of hours" to reflect fallout from the virus and based on a forecast that the economy would contract one percent this year.

Asked whether the stock market should be closed in light of the economic turmoil, Le Maire said there were other things that could be done first such as banning short-selling, which he said the markets regulator was doing for 24 hours.

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