Ok

En poursuivant votre navigation sur ce site, vous acceptez l'utilisation de cookies. Ces derniers assurent le bon fonctionnement de nos services. En savoir plus.

post marxist culture

  • FRANCE LIVING IN "SOCIAL-MARXIST" PAST

    France 's richest man waded into the country's presidential election debate on Thursday by attacking a "Social-Marxist culture" he said still dominated much thinking about the economy. Bernard Arnault, ranked by U.S. magazine Forbes as the 7th richest person in the world with an estimated personal fortune of $26 billion, said France needed a sea-change in attitudes if it was to grow faster and create more jobs. "If we want to get France out of its current situation, with its debt and unemployment, the only way is to re-launch the economy by profoundly changing the approach of the last nearly 25 years," Arnault told Europe 1 radio in an interview. "I think there remains in France a basic Social-Marxist culture which has totally disappeared among our main competitors," said Arnault, who controls luxury goods groups Christian Dior and LVMH . French executives have complained in the past that the country's political leaders have an anti-business bias, but most have stayed on the sidelines during the election campaign. However, Arnault broke ranks on Monday, taking aim at the French left, which has traditionally viewed big business with suspicion and has regularly railed against generous executive salaries, stock option plans and hefty dividend payouts. "I think the left in France is archaic from this point of view compared with the left in Britain ," said Arnault, who is an adviser on international business issues to Gordon Brown. It would be difficult "in the current climate" to play a similar role in France , he said. Royal said last year capitalists "have to be frightened" to deter them from re-locating business to cheaper labour markets, while Sarkozy, who presents himself as pro-business, has revealed strong interventionalist tendencies. However, Royal appeared to soften her approach in an interview published on Thursday, saying she wanted a "new deal with business" that overcame "traditional cliches". "Of course I am for a market economy ... As for profits, they are necessary," she told business magazine, Challenges. Asked about Royal's comments, Arnault said he did not want to comment on specific candidates, but added that the French left needed to change if it wanted to win election. "What France needs in my view is to make all voters, all the population aware that a country's wealth is created by its companies and not by inflating state spending," Arnault said.

    HOW TRUE!