Time to guillotine France’s super-rich tax breaks - FT中文网
登录×
电子邮件/用户名
密码
记住我
请输入邮箱和密码进行绑定操作:
请输入手机号码,通过短信验证(目前仅支持中国大陆地区的手机号):
请您阅读我们的用户注册协议隐私权保护政策,点击下方按钮即视为您接受。
专栏 财富不平等

Time to guillotine France’s super-rich tax breaks

Does the country need a wealth tax?
00:00

{"text":[[{"start":6.48,"text":"It’s easy to mock the French. I’ve done it myself. Most of them expect the state to fund their 25-year retirements and everything else. Then, when the budget deficit hits 5.8 per cent of GDP, and the government looks for cuts, people here go on strike, complaining that the developed world’s biggest-spending state is “néolibéral”. Opposition parties refuse any compromise with Emmanuel Macron, the so-called “president of the rich”."}],[{"start":38.11,"text":"But I’ve come to feel that French anger is partly justified. France today is an underfunded social democracy crossed with an oligarchy. More than any other western European country, it’s dominated by powerful billionaires paying relatively low taxes. Most voters agree that France should cut its deficit. The argument is about who should pay. The majority says: the super-rich first."}],[{"start":64.6,"text":"Oligarchs are people who possess both wealth and power, and use one to acquire the other. They have grown abundant in France this century, thanks largely to the rise of French luxury companies. The EU’s seven most valuable companies include LVMH (run by France’s richest man, Bernard Arnault), Hermès and L’Oréal. LVMH now exports more than all of French agriculture."}],[{"start":91.53,"text":"The biggest beneficiaries are France’s 500 richest families. Between 1996 and 2024, their wealth ballooned from 6 per cent of French GDP to 42 per cent, writes economist Gabriel Zucman in his forthcoming book, whose title translates as “The Billionaires Don’t Pay Tax on Revenues and We’re Going to Put a Stop to That”. France now leads the EU in numbers of billionaires, according to the EU Tax Observatory, with 147. The majority aren’t meritocrats: 60 of the country’s 100 richest families are heirs, reports the Fondation Jean-Jaurès think-tank."}],[{"start":136.88,"text":"Oligarchs tend to keep their wealth in holding companies. Because corporate tax (cut by Macron) is lower than income tax, they pay an effective tax rate of just 25 per cent, about half that of the average French person, calculates Zucman. He proposes a wealth tax of 2 per cent on the 1,800 people worth over €100mn In a poll by Ifop, 86 per cent favoured “la taxe Zucman”."}],[{"start":165.22,"text":"Arnault doesn’t. To him, the plan is “a clearly stated desire to destroy the French economy”. Macron sides with the oligarch. France’s deficit is the logical outcome of Macronism: a massive state combined with tax cuts for rich people. The president bows to oligarchs. Men like Arnault, Martin Bouygues and the far-right-supporting Vincent Bolloré own much of French media, and have a fast track to every president. Jacques Chirac lived out his days in a Parisian mansion owned by the mogul François Pinault. The night Nicolas Sarkozy was elected president in 2007, he celebrated with his billionaire chums at Fouquet’s restaurant on the Champs-Élysées."}],[{"start":213.81,"text":"Macron regularly meets oligarchs. When they feel like it, they contribute to his projects. The bulk of donations to restore Notre-Dame after its fire came from Arnault, Pinault and the Bettencourt family, heirs to the L’Oréal fortune. LVMH was “premium partner” of the Paris Olympics."}],[{"start":233.25,"text":"You see the oligarchs’ imprint all over Paris. The Fondation Cartier, which unveils its new premises opposite the Louvre on October 25, joins the Fondation LVMH and Pinault’s Bourse in the city’s growing cluster of billionaire art museums. Around the corner from my office in the historically lower-middle-class 11th arrondissement, a dilapidated building is being renovated into an Hermès store. Paris itself is becoming a luxury city, its apartments increasingly bought up by French high earners and foreigners, while in certain neighbourhoods about 10 per cent of residents are aristocrats. It’s as if 1789 never happened."}],[{"start":274.68,"text":"This annoys many French people. France isn’t the US, where the rich are admired. And plutocratisation is especially irksome at a time when, following Macron’s cuts to benefits, about one in six French people live in poverty — the most since records began in 1996. Close to my office, a coffee shop serving €6 “matcha tonics” sits opposite a food bank."}],[{"start":300.52,"text":"France’s middle classes are struggling too: rates of home ownership have stagnated at 57 per cent of the population for 20 years, reports the Fondation Jaurès. There’s a widespread desire for a 1789 — without the guillotines. Zucman says his wealth tax could raise €20bn a year. Even if that’s over-optimistic, any French government will need to ask billionaires to pay more. If they won’t sacrifice for the deficit, why should anyone else?"}],[{"start":333.15,"text":"This article has been amended since first publication to remove an erroneous reference to the valuation of Dior"}],[{"start":348.97999999999996,"text":""}]],"url":"https://audio.ftcn.net.cn/album/a_1761022496_5108.mp3"}

版权声明:本文版权归FT中文网所有,未经允许任何单位或个人不得转载,复制或以任何其他方式使用本文全部或部分,侵权必究。

面对AI创造的社会财富,人类需要重构税法

问题不在于大规模就业不足会不会到来,而在于一旦到来,我们是否已经准备好相应的政策框架。

终场哨声吹响后:媒体集团争夺世界杯观众

YouTube、播客和现场活动正在开辟将2026年世界杯变现的新渠道。

霍尔木兹海峡“暗航”增多

越来越多油轮在美国的协助下经阿曼航线穿越霍尔木兹海峡。

美国的CEO们越来越富有,却也越来越不安

2025年,超过29%的标普500指数公司为高管提供家庭安保福利。

FT社评:特朗普的AI基金构想有利于政治,不利于经济

旨在让美国民众共享AI技术红利的计划,不会让新科技创造的财富民主化,更可能强化科技巨头及政府管理者的权力。

Lex专栏:锡——从罐头材料变身AI热潮关键金属

锡价上涨正促使一些矿商押注于这种看起来极为平常的金属,重新开始采掘工作。
设置字号×
最小
较小
默认
较大
最大
分享×