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Deputies remembered that a year ago Mollet had forced through a 105 billion franc program of old age pensions and paid vacations and still had a proposal to socialize medicine on his books. The temptation was too great to resist: in the constituencies a vote against Mollet on the budget would not be a vote against the Algerian war (which most Deputies favor) but a vote against high taxes and against Socialist experiments...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: FRANCE: The Big Knife | 6/3/1957 | See Source »

Mollet's maneuver was timed to coincide with the National Assembly debate on the government's demand for 150 billion francs ($428 million) in new taxes. Last week, as the Assembly Finance Committee tore up Finance Minister Paul Ra-madier's tax plan (indirect levies which would fall heavily on upper-income brackets), there was a significant rise in the price of the gold Napoleon, a coin that Frenchmen traditionally buy when they become nervous about their country's currency. Suggestions that the franc be devalued* were described by Mollet as "crime and imbecility...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: FRANCE: At the Stake | 5/27/1957 | See Source »

...cries of professed astonishment and dismay rang through Europe. There was talk of "British desertion," and Britain's NATO representative reported that NATO officials were "shocked." A typical French reaction came from the left-wing Franc-Tireur: "England has ceased to be a power. She is becoming an island once more. She is tiptoeing out of a political system built in Europe around NATO." Defense Minister Bourges-Maunoury called reliance on atomic arms a "facile policy," and not one for France, which prefers to think there will always be conventional wars. (European nations worried by British troop withdrawals from...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: GREAT BRITAIN: Entering the Missile Age | 4/15/1957 | See Source »

...themselves, the French want no kings ruling over them. The last Emperor of France was tossed off the throne 86 years ago. Today unthroned royalty from other lands are a franc a dozen in the haunts of Paris' international set. The businesslike, democratic sovereigns of northern Europe frequently turn up in town without causing a ripple. But Parisians in all walks of life have been in a dither for weeks over next week's visit of Britain's Queen Elizabeth. Day laborers and priestesses of haute couture, florists and jewelers, architects and restaurateurs, waiters and street sweepers...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign News: Messieurs, the Queen | 4/8/1957 | See Source »

Successful as these manipulations were in stalling off the dreaded wage increase, they have cost the government an estimated $195 million a year, in increased subsidies and lost taxes, at a time when the government needs every franc it can lay hands on. In just over a year, excessive consumption of imported raw materials-aggravated by the post-Suez necessity of buying U.S. "dollar oil"-has cut French gold and foreign-exchange reserves from $1.7 billion to $934 million. Between the Algerian war (daily cost: about $3,000,000) and increased old-age pensions, this year's national budget...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: FRANCE: The Phony Thermometer | 3/18/1957 | See Source »

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