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    Sarkozy to detail reforms to help business, jobs

    PARIS (Reuters) - French President Nicolas Sarkozy is set to reveal a swathe of new economic reforms on Sunday to create more jobs, improve business competitiveness and convince voters he is the right leader to revive France's sputtering economy.

    Three months before presidential elections in which Sarkozy has yet to announce his candidacy, the incumbent is focused on economic competitiveness, amid a long-running euro zone crisis and what many economists believe is a mild recession in France.

    In the interview at 1900 GMT to be televised on nine channels, Sarkozy will address ways to stem rampant unemployment now at a 12-year high by helping employers hire more staff while becoming more competitive on the international market.

    He will unveil plans for a so-called "Social VAT" in which social contributions made by employers will be cut and consumers will instead pay a higher value-added tax.

    Le Monde reported on Saturday that the German-inspired "Social VAT" would raise VAT by 1.6 percentage points to 21.2 percent.

    Sarkozy is also expected to give details of a financial transaction tax in France that he hopes will subsequently be adopted across the European Union.

    The president's speech comes exactly a week after his Socialist rival, Francois Hollande, kicked off his campaign offensive with a speech slamming the world of high finance.

    Hollande revealed later in the week his plan to raise taxes on banks, large companies and the rich to help stem the deficit, while spending on education.

    An Ifop poll published on Sunday in Le Journal du Dimanche indicated that voters considered Hollande the best candidate to tackle unemployment and debt reduction.

    Forty-six percent of voters said they had more confidence in Hollande to fight unemployment, versus 22 percent for Sarkozy. Some 34 percent chose Hollande as the candidate to best handle the public debt, versus 32 percent for Sarkozy.

    The president has tried in recent weeks to cast himself as the more experienced candidate with the international stature and clear-headedness to guide France through recent turmoil at the euro zone level and at home.

    On Saturday, Prime Minister Francois Fillon told a conference of the centre-right UMP party that globalization requires France to be more competitive and innovative, while demonstrating more budgetary discipline.

    "Who other than Nicolas Sarkozy can defend our interests, reform the country, unite European energy, and convince the great powers of this world?" said Fillon.

    He dismissed the Socialists' agenda as an untenable dream.

    "The Socialist dream isn't what France needs. In a period of crisis, it's lucidity, sang-froid, it's pragmatism that counts," he said. "We will not fix France through dreams, we will fix it through work, through initiative, investment and through courage."

    (Reporting By Alexandria Sage; Editing by Tim Pearce)

     

    6 comments

    • One Foot In The Gravy  •  26 days ago
      So the right wing Sarkozy thinks that by lowering contributions for employers and raising VAT for everyone will be an incentive to create more jobs in France. What a complete fool this little man with the big ideas is. Just like Cameron, he is totally out of touch with reality.
    • gerwyn  •  26 days ago
      What are you going to do Napoleon commit hari cari " you stupid boy"
    • PatSyCola -  •  Brighton, England  •  26 days ago
      Now be honest if Sarkozy told yu he was coming round to help YOU would you answer the door or pretend you had gone out ?
    • jon  •  South Croydon, England  •  26 days ago
      At least he is trying to help employers and create jobs unlike the governement in the UK who prefers to put business rates up by 6% while raising benefits by the same amount.
      I would rather trust Sarkozy anytime that the weasel UK coalition who has not intention in tackling benefit culture.
    • muguet  •  London, England  •  26 days ago
      Marine le pen would make a far better président then this weasel.
    • JEAN HISLOP  •  25 days ago
      A taxation system based on purchases not earnings is far fairer.