Le Pen's anti-euro plan 'to cost France 30 billion a year'

15 Feb, 2017

Marine Le Pen's pledge to ditch the euro if elected French president would cost the country over 30 billion euros a year in increased borrowing costs, the country's central bank governor warned Monday. With less than three months to go before the first round of the election Le Pen is polling strongly on a nationalist platform of heavily curtailing migration, relinquishing the euro and organising a referendum on France's EU membership.
Banque de France governor Francois Villeroy de Galhau said that pulling out of the single currency would drive up the cost of France's borrowing. "If we were alone, we would be helpless faced with financial market speculation... and helpless faced with US pressure on the dollar," he told France Inter radio. "Financing France's public debt would cost over 30 billion euros ($31 billion) a year: that's the equivalent of France's annual defence budget," he said.

Read Comments