Why Every American Should Care About The French Presidential Race
By: Rachel Marsden
Being a geopolitical analyst and forecaster often means having to explain to 
people sitting in America how and why a single event in Africa, Russia or China 
will directly impact them either personally or professionally. One such event is 
the French presidential election set for May 2012, for which the opposition 
Socialists have just selected their candidate, Francois Hollande, in a final 
round of open primary voting.
For most people, the knee-jerk reaction to an event on the other side of the 
world is, “Why should I give a toss what happens in France? Also, they are 
Socialists and promiscuous, so there’s that.” While such foreign policy prowess 
might be a hit at the local pub, would it really be smart to ignore an election 
that will impact everything in your life for which you pay or require borrowed 
money? Bear with me as I explain how and why this is the case.
No one really knows who will be the French president by this time next year. The 
French haven’t been keen to elect a Socialist to highest office since Francois 
Mitterrand in 1988, and polls strongly suggest that they aren’t now. If 
anything, they’d be voting against Nicolas Sarkozy, whose ideas and promises 
they like, but often fail in their transformation from hot air to something 
tangible. The French are also tired of the near-weekly “casseroles,” as they 
call the regular scandals involving the Sarkozy entourage. But they don’t seem 
to want National Front leader Marine Le Pen either—a nationalist and Socialist 
who has proclaimed Obama to be more right-wing than she is, and whose platform 
has gradually revealed nanny-statism and aversion to free-market principles. Le 
Pen blames the world’s problems on capitalism rather than heavy-handed 
government meddling, and believes the solution is more government intervention. 
That leaves the Socialists in a shocking position of being a viable alternative, 
if only because the bar has been brought right down to ground level. If 
Sarkozy’s ratings remain low, and the ruling party ultimately decides to replace 
him, the current dynamics might change quickly.
In all cases, the future of Europe depends on this French election. Le Pen 
openly fantasizes about a Eurozone breakup, a position supported by many French 
people who loathe the idea of paying other countries’ social nets, while the 
Socialists and Sarkozy’s Union for a Popular Movement party both want sheer 
political will to hold Europe together as it careens toward collective 
bankruptcy at hypersonic speed, money flying out of the fuller pockets and into 
emptier ones. Socialist Hollande claims to defend the middle class while taxing 
high-earners who create jobs. He vows to significantly reduce the debt while 
bailing out other countries along with Germany, all while undoing Sarkozy’s 
retirement reforms so people can again cash in on benefits earlier. It’s the 
usual Socialist fiscal math of “1 + 1 = You’re paying, so who cares.”
Whoever gets elected in France, the Eurozone risks breaking apart—if not from Le 
Pen’s proclaimed will, then by default from the other two parties’ blind 
ignorance. Europe’s economic engine, France and Germany, representing 40% of its 
economic power, will eventually have rummaged around and spent all the loose 
change they unearthed from between couch cushions. Greece and other countries 
are going broke faster than French and Germans can produce.
The solution to this predicament is decreased spending and/or increased 
production. Because less spending seems unlikely, then it would make sense to 
produce more. This would mean slapping import taxes on products from China to 
make them competitive with domestically produced goods, reducing union costs 
that drive up prices, and lowering taxes on French producers to keep them from 
outsourcing. Think that sounds easy? Think again: What’s China’s largest export 
market? Europe. Who’s buying up Europe’s debt bonds to ensure European consumers 
can keep getting their “Made in China” fix? That's right -- China.
China certainly doesn’t have a domestic consumer economy, because wages are so 
low. So China is outsourcing its consumers to Europe and Europe is outsourcing 
its production to China. It’s a symbiotic survival relationship. Does Europe 
still exist as Europe, with China as a major stakeholder calling the shots? And where does this leave America? Relegated to 
mistress status, with China buying fewer debt bonds in favor of leveraging 
Europe. This means less money floating around in America to buy that 
Chinese-made swing-set for your kid from Walmart. Checkmate.
 
COPYRIGHT 2011 RACHEL MARSDEN