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By John Simpson World Affairs Editor, BBC News
Everyone in Europe is feeling the economic pain. So why do opinion polls show
that the French are particularly gloomy, compared with other Europeans? For The
Editors, a programme which sets out to ask challenging questions, I decided to
find out.
In fact, the real pain has scarcely begun in France, though like a patient
going in for surgery everyone is wincing in anticipation.
Is the French gloom simply caused by the news headlines?
Is it the cumulative psychological result of an apparently weak government, an
awful spring, rising prices, and a fear that things cannot remain the same?
Or does it go deeper, much deeper?
I became a Francophile in my teens, in the 1960s. It came of watching Godard
and Truffaut films, Jeanne Moreau and Jean-Paul Belmondo, and admiring the
language and the way of life.
John Simpson in Paris
BBC News: The Editors features the BBC's on-air specialists asking questions
which reveal deeper truths about their areas of expertise
The Editors
In 2000 I bought a flat in Paris, near the Eiffel Tower, and my family and I
spend a few days here every six weeks or so.
We have never seen our French friends and neighbours so depressed.
The city remains as delightful as ever.
The restaurants are just as good, and if they are more expensive that simply
makes it easier to get tables.
The health service is probably the finest in the world. Public transport is
excellent, though taxi drivers are a miserable lot.
Everyone knows that savage cuts are on their way.
After the Socialist Francois Mitterrand's famous victory in 1981, at a time
when Britain under Margaret Thatcher was cutting back fiercely on government
expenditure, the French instinct was always to spend more.
Hospitals, transport, culture - money was lavished and the results were
sensational.
Pensions and state benefits were among the best in Europe. The streets were
beautifully clean.
To come here from depressed, dirty London was to feel a cloud lifting.
A Paris cafe Paris remains an enchanting city but restaurants are not as full
as they were
Now, though, there is a price to be paid. During the current economic troubles
the Germans have made their cuts, gone through the pain barrier, and come out
stronger and richer.
The British, the Spanish, the Greeks are doing the same and hope to have the
same results.
Not so the French. They are still standing on the edge of the pool, dipping
their toes in the water and wincing. Everyone knows that the combination of a
short working week, early retirement, big pensions and excellent health
benefits does not add up.
But when do the cuts start?
The waiting is becoming intolerable.
Previously in the Magazine
BBC News Magazine Feature
"Now I know there is bad news everywhere. But there is something about the
atmosphere in France that worries me. I think it is to do with a lack of
perspective, a lack of potential for change.
"In Britain you get the impression that however controversial they may be,
efforts are at least being made to redefine parts of national life, like
education or welfare. There is movement.
"The same cannot be said in France, where the government's new plan to cut
unemployment for instance - with tens of thousands of state-financed youth jobs
- is basically the same as the one I remember reporting on 15 years ago."
I invited various friends to meet me at little eateries close to my flat, and I
asked their opinions on why the atmosphere is so gloomy at present.
My neighbour, Anne-Marie Mautin, runs a quirky little shop which sells a
combination of rugby memorabilia and delicacies and wine from the French
south-west.
Now though L'Esprit du Sud-Ouest is threatened with closure.
"It is simply what France is going to go through," she says sadly.
Christian Constant, the television chef, runs no fewer than three restaurants
in our street, all excellent.
"We are not doing badly because tourism is so good. But we know that difficult
days are coming," he says.
My close friend from university days, Nicholas Snowman, has lived in France on
and off for nearly 40 years.
He is an arts administrator who once ran Glyndebourne and London's South Bank,
and then moved on to the Strasbourg Opera, and is a Chevalier of the Legion
d'Honneur.
"Frankly," he says over coffee in a nice little bakery in Paris, "this country
has to decide whether it is going to be the world's best-ever Club Med, with
fantastic tourist attractions and culture, and will go bust, or whether it will
change its entire way of running itself and survive. No wonder everyone is
worried."
But when he and I had lunch at one of Christian Constant's eateries, another
guest explained things in different terms.
Claudia Senik, a sociologist, recently wrote a book called The French
Unhappiness Puzzle.
She maintains that France gets its gloom from its schools.
Francois Hollande France's President Francois Hollande has little to smile
about
"If you take the children of immigrants who go through the French education
system, they are just as unhappy as people who were born and educated in
France. But immigrants who arrive later are as happy as people in other
countries," she says.
Nicholas Snowman agrees.
"The French education system does concentrate on academic results. It certainly
does not encourage the growth of the whole person," he adds.
Maybe they are right.
But for me, especially when the sun is shining - though Paris does have a
marginally higher rainfall than London - there is no finer place to be in the
entire world.
And whenever I come here I feel the opposite of gloomy.