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French PM plans new tax on people earning over 250,000 euros a year, Les Echos says

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French Prime Minister Sebastien Lecornu plans a tax targeting individuals with annual incomes of over 250,000 euros to try to win the Socialist opposition's backing for his government's 2026 state budget, financial daily Les Echos said on Saturday.

Les Echos reported that Lecornu plans two measures, each targeting taxpayers declaring more than 250,000 euros ($300,000) in income - or 500,000 euros for a couple - to raise an additional 3 billion euros in fiscal revenue next year.

A first measure would be to renew a one-off tax introduced by predecessor Francois Bayrou last year, the CDHR (differential contribution on high incomes) "minimum tax" which aims to ensure that all high-earning tax households concerned pay at least 20% of their income in taxes.

The minority government also wants to crack down on the super-wealthy's use of holding companies as a piggy bank, it said, as part of a drive against tax optimisation led by the outgoing budget minister, Amelie de Montchalin.


Les Echos said the finance ministry had identified some 30,000 financial structures that would fall within the scope of the measure, notably for cashing in dividends but never re-distributing them, so that dividend tax can be avoided.

The holding company measure is expected to yield just over 1 billion euros for 2026, the paper said, adding that - along with other measures - the total expected additional contribution from the wealthiest individuals would be between 4 billion and 4.5 billion euros.

The finance ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Lecornu last month became President Emmanuel Macron's fifth prime minister in two years after parliament ousted Bayrou over his plans for a 44-billion-euro budget squeeze next year.

Without giving much detail, Lecornu on Friday outlined a wealth tax among proposals aimed at winning leftist support for the 2026 budget, which the Socialists called "insufficient" without closing the door on further talks.

With parliament divided into three blocs, none of which has a majority, Lecornu relies on rival parties to pass legislation - and for his own survival as prime minister.

The Socialists want a 2% wealth tax on France's 0.01% in the 2026 budget as the price for their support, making Lecornu's political survival contingent on a measure that has strong public support but alienates conservatives.
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