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Europe
French no longer bon vivants
2005-08-09
The French now have so much free time that they cannot afford to enjoy it, tourism professionals said yesterday, blaming a sharp fall in summer hotel and restaurant revenues on the average Gallic tourist's newfound parsimony.
35 hour work week, 11% unemployment, private sector hasn't grown in 20 years, yep, some belt-tightening just might be in order ...
With many employees entitled to up to 11 weeks annual leave, thanks to the 35-hour-week laws introduced four years ago, the French are taking more breaks. However, they tend to be shorter and holidaymakers have less cash to spend when they are away.

The Union of Hotel and Restaurant Owners said its members have complained that holidaymakers now rarely take aperitifs, that they drink water rather than wine, eat sandwiches at lunchtime, order just one course at dinner and refuse even a post-prandial coffee.
Barbarians!
Overall, it estimates that takings this summer are down by 15-20%. "One of the effects of so much more time off is that people are spending so much more through the year on planes and trains that that they have to economise when they are actually away," said Brigitte Lenfant of the tourist office at Meditterranean resort of La Grande Motte.
Next year they'll stay home and putter 'round the house ...
Official statistics appear to confirm the trend away from the traditional month-long summer vacation. A French government agency said last week that the average summer break now lasted a fortnight.

France's faltering economy and unemployment rate is not helping either. A recent survey by Ipsos polling group found that 52% of French people planned to spend less than €1,500 (£1,038) of their budget on holidays this year. The proportion taking at least one break away from home is also falling. Nearly 16% of the population have never been away and half of all French holidaymakers now stay with friends or family.

The trend is being particularly keenly felt along the Mediterranean and south-western Atlantic coast, where most of the year's income is earned in July and August. "It's really getting problematic," said one Nice hotelier and restaurateur. "People are having a snack at lunchtime and avoiding anything that resembles a restuarant.

"Often they'll go out for a full three-course meal in a decent establishment just once in their whole holiday. We're no longer a nation of bon vivants, it seems."
Posted by:Steve White

#10  My Sax Legume!

This line of thought stops too soon. It fails to consider what happens after productivity is improved and workers are available to be redeployed somewhere else in the economy

So simple, yet SO HARD FOR HAMMERHEADS TO UNDERSTAND, IT'S SIMPLE. Help me Joe.
Posted by: Shipman   2005-08-09 18:08  

#9  Carl in NH asked for online resources about tourism in France.

The French statistsics institution is the insee but you could also have to look at the French ministry of Tourism website
Posted by: JFM   2005-08-09 17:18  

#8  Yup, JFM has hit it right on the head - the poor sods that really need the money and are willing to work for it, are not allowed to because the bobos (brilliant term by the way) find it reprehensible that people have to work for a living.

I'm currently reading a fascinating book 'The Power of Productivity' by William Lewis that is very illuminating - one key point;


Most people consider 'social objectives' to be 'good.' Import tariffs, subsidized loans for small businesses, government disallowance of layoffs, and high minimum wages are all examples of economic policies designed to achieve social objectives. We can't have it both ways. These measures distort markets severely and limit productivity growth, slow overall economic growth, and cause unemployment. Rather than support these measures, it is better to level the playing field, create a bigger economic pie, and manage the distribution of that pie through the tax code for individuals.


And one other key point on productivity;


It is tempting to conclude that if productivity increases, then employment must go down. After all, if the workforce works more efficiently, then fewer workers are needed. This line of thought stops too soon. It fails to consider what happens after productivity is improved and workers are available to be redeployed somewhere else in the economy. It assumes incorrectly that the amount of business activity in an economy is fixed. In fact, if workers are available, entrepreneurs can match them with new business ideas and investment capital and thus increase the total amount of business activity in an economy. The production of goods and services thus increases, along with the productivity increase, and employment levels do not have to decrease.


Which is one of the most succinct descriptions I've read of the benefits of increased productivity.

I'm hardly a third of the way through it and finding nuggets on every page - great book!
Posted by: Tony (UK)   2005-08-09 16:45  

#7  Cheer up, Frenchies. You may no longer be bon vivants, but you're still snotty a$$holes. And nobody can take that away from you.
Posted by: BH   2005-08-09 15:18  

#6  "bobos" = "bourgeois bohemian" (or vice versa) -- same term in Merkin, JFM.

By the way JFM, do they have any online resources in French or English confirming, for example, latest stats for tourism, like LotP mentioned in #3 ?

Posted by: Carl in N.H.   2005-08-09 12:17  

#5  In fact low wage people were/are against the 35 hour week. They wanted to work longer work and toget higher pay. It was the syndicates (very weak in France, except unfortunately at a couple key chokepoints like train and electricity) and specially the bobos (I think the american term is yuppies) who were for it
Posted by: JFM   2005-08-09 11:12  

#4  Maybe they're staying home to make sure Granny and Gramps don't get vaporized in the next heat wave???
Posted by: tu3031   2005-08-09 10:05  

#3  used to be, Merkins were 25% of the French tourist revenues

Can't imagine why that changed ..... heh
Posted by: leader of the pack   2005-08-09 09:39  

#2  Yeah, and with the American tourist trade down....
Posted by: Flash Hupomoling8954   2005-08-09 08:43  

#1  Sounds like a cheap spot to vacation.
Posted by: Spinelet Wheasing6888   2005-08-09 01:08  

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