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The announcement that the French economy grew by 0.14% in the third quarter of 2008 has baffled the pundits and
delighted the government. While Germany, Italy, Britain and the United States have moved clearly into recession,
France has managed to grow its economy, albeit by a small amount.

With a huge smile on her face, Christine Lagarde told F2 TV viewers that the figures
would not be as bad as predicted. The key to this relative success would appear to be the French government's
determined measures to encourage spending by France’s thrifty consumers.
While the level of British savings, at zero per cent, are the lowest they have ever
been since figures were first collected, the French have continued with their traditional tendency to make
sure that there is always a cushion between them and financial disaster. The average French savings rate is
more than 10% of Gross Domestic Product. While in recent years the rest of the world spent its savings with
consequent growth, French consumers kept their money in the bank.
Compared with Germany, France also has the new-found advantage of not being the
biggest exporter in the world. At the moment, it is exports which are suffering worldwide more than internal
consumption.
It remains to be seen whether this good quarterly figure has merely
postponed the recession for six months or whether the governments pro-active measures will defy the international
trend
altogether. International forecasts are not encouraging but then a panel of 24 economists predicted
that France would fall into recession this quarter and they were
wrong.
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