Said1
Gold Member
Nonprofit France - September 23, 2005
If you thought starting a business in France was difficult, try closing one.
Last month, a French court ordered Nestlé to reopen an unprofitable factory shut down in June. Apparently, the Swiss food giant hadn't met all of France's labor law requirements -- even though it had offered the 427 workers in question early retirement schemes or jobs in other Nestlé plants in France.
So when President Jacques Chirac asked his cabinet Tuesday to ensure that Hewlett-Packard "fully respects" its obligations under French labor law, it was no empty threat. CEO Mark Hurd, who wants to cut 14,500 jobs world-wide, including 1,240 positions in France, had better make sure his lawyers have read the fine print of the French legal code. Mr. Chirac even appealed to the European Commission for help but Brussels mercifully rejected the idea of interfering with business decisions.
You know france is screwed up when the EU won't go along with them.
Part of this is of course the posturing of an unpopular President trying at least to appear that he's doing something for the country's 10% unemployed. But as the Nestlé case proves, too often this posturing is backed up by real action.
France's staggering jobless rate is largely the result of a fundamental misunderstanding of capitalism. Somehow, the country's fabled "social model" assumes that companies should operate like nonprofit organizations. But neither do entrepreneurs create jobs out of charity nor do they lay off people out of malice -- despite French Employment Minister Gerard Larcher's calling Hewlett-Packard's plan "brutal."
It is the much-maligned drive for profit that creates growth and jobs. Labor laws that make it costly to lay off workers are not "social"; they discourage companies from hiring. And when not even unprofitable plants can be shut down, it will hardly prompt investors, foreign or domestic, to open new ones.
Will the last private business left in france please turn off the lights.
France isn't very investor-friendly to begin with. Rumors in July that Pepsi might take over dairy food company Danone put Mr. Chirac into protectionist overdrive. The government is drawing up a list of industries to keep out of foreign hands. Even Paris will have difficulty though arguing yogurt production is a matter of national security. And yet, despite renewed speculation this week, a Pepsi-Danone deal is in doubt. As one analyst told Reuters Wednesday: "If I put myself in Pepsi's shoes, do I want to invest $30 billion in buying a company in France with President Chirac, the chairman, unions and farmers hostile to the move? You'd be insane."
If Pepsi does, expect the market to treat it like a red haired step son.
Smart investors rarely are insane, as France's unemployment rate demonstrates.
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