Weak trend per capita GDP growth but stable income inequality in France
France is in an intermediate situation in terms of the impact of the crisis
Unemployment is rising
The real estate sector is weaker, but few loans are non-performing
Private debt has grown sharply from a low level
The capitalisation of French banks has risen, and pressures have diminished
Monetary and financial institutions in France have large balance sheets
Public deficit and debt, 1990-2014
General government expenditure as a percentage of GDP in France and other OECD countries
Public and private pension spending
The efficiency of healthcare expenditure can be improved in France
The degree of redistribution is high in France
Tax administration costs, 2009
The labour tax wedge is high in France, 2011
Top effective marginal tax rates on real returns on different asset classes, 2011
Trade balance and business profits
Regulation is still heavy
Corporate tax revenues, 2011
Corporate tax loopholes are very significant
Taxes on labour are high
The relative minimum wage is high
Relative minimum wage by region, 2009
Labour-management relations do not seem to be of good quality
French employment rates vary widely by age bracket
Employment rates of older workers in France
Distribution of mean wages by age bracket, 2009
The difficulties of young people in the labour market
Sensitivity of the youth unemployment rate to economic fluctuations, 15-24 years
Number of apprentices at year-end, by level of diploma
Outcomes are not related to education spending for the more affluent OECD countries
Ratio of PISA scores of the best and worst students , 2009
Ratio of annual spending per primary school pupil to that for upper-secondary education, 2009
Grade repetition is very high in France
Spending per student for the various higher education sectors, 2009
Degree of university autonomy in Europe, 2010