every vacation must end
…even vacations from economic reality.
Getting the French to Work
Christine Lagarde, the country’s first female minister for finance and the economy, says it is time for French people to “roll up their sleeves” and stop thinking about holidays.
The former international lawyer, impressed by the work ethic during her time in the US, is intent on instilling the same spirit in her countrymen and women.
Her approach is calm and conciliatory, bearing little resemblance to the fire and brimstone of her boss, Nicolas Sarkozy.
Yet Christine Lagarde shares the president’s convictions when it comes to the French and the world of work.
Until three years ago she was chairman of the law firm Baker and McKenzie, whose main offices are in Chicago.
Her entry into French politics was sudden.
Called up by the former government of Dominique de Villepin, she left the US on a Tuesday afternoon and was at her desk as trade minister the following morning.
Rapid progress
She says she was struck on her return by an “ethical change” in the French.
“Instead of thinking about their work, people were thinking about their weekend… organising, planning and engineering time off,” she says.
Not that Christine Lagarde believes that life should be “work and nothing else”.
Looking out from her office window in the huge Soviet-style finance ministry, she points out the barges on the River Seine below - a reminder she says, of how slow things can be when other events are moving at high speed.
Making rapid progress recently has been the minister’s pet project, a bill to modernise the French economy.
Last week it passed its first reading in the National Assembly and will shortly go before the Senate.
“More enterprises and more competition” were the objectives, she told parliament earlier this month, in order to obtain three concrete results: “more growth, more jobs and more purchasing power”.
How ironic that as some in France are realizing the benefit of behaving like the US, we have a presidential candidate and party eager to emulate the Europeans.