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France faces debt drift without spending cuts, pension reform, OECD says

By Thomson Reuters Jun 30, 2026 | 4:48 AM

By Leigh Thomas

PARIS, June 30 (Reuters) – France’s already heavy debt burden is at risk of rising steadily higher unless the government delivers deeper spending cuts and restarts stalled pension reforms, ​the OECD warned on Tuesday, as slowing growth adds pressure ‌on public finances.

The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development said in a report on the euro zone’s second-biggest economy that France’s fiscal position remains stretched, with the deficit expected to stay around 5% of gross domestic product in 2026 and public ‌debt ​continuing to climb towards 119% of output.

To ⁠stabilise debt in the years ⁠ahead, the OECD said France will need a cumulative fiscal-tightening effort worth three percentage points of GDP by 2030, well beyond any measures that have been introduced.

With an April 2027 presidential election looming, ​future governments will have to tackle France’s public spending, which remains significantly higher than its peers.

A central plank of any strategy to ⁠get the finances under control is the ⁠resumption of a 2023 pension reform, which gradually raises ​the legal retirement age to 64 from 62. It was put on ​hold last year until after the election.

The Paris-based OECD urged ‌the government to restart the overhaul as planned and ultimately link retirement age to life expectancy, a potentially explosive suggestion in a country that has experienced major strikes and street protests over pension reforms.

Without such ⁠changes, rising pension and healthcare costs will continue to weigh on already strained finances even as higher interest rates lift borrowing costs, the OECD said.

The ⁠warning comes as the ‌economic backdrop weakens. After growing 0.9% in 2025, ⁠France’s economy is set to slow to 0.7% ​in 2026 ‌before edging up to 0.8% in 2027, reflecting ​ongoing political ⁠uncertainty, higher interest rates and external shocks.

Subdued growth will make deficit reduction harder, particularly as higher interest rates push up debt-servicing costs and limit fiscal flexibility. While exports and a resilient labour market have provided some support, consumption and investment remain fragile, the OECD said.

(Reporting by Leigh Thomas; Editing ​by Thomas Derpinghaus)