Iran crisis costs France up to 6 billion euros, says minister

French Minister for Economy, Finance, and Industrial, Energy and Digital Sovereignty Roland Lescure attends the IMF/World Bank 2026 Spring Meetings in Washington, D.C., U.S., April 16, 2026. REUTERS
PARIS, April 21 (Reuters) – The economic fallout ​from the crisis in Iran has cost France between 4 ‌billion euros ($4.70 billion) and 6 billion euros, Finance Minister Roland Lescure said on Tuesday, as the government prepares new support measures alongside a freeze on some ​spending.
There has been a sharp rise in bond yields since ​the start of the conflict in the Middle East, ⁠and the subsequent increase in government borrowing costs alone are adding ​an extra 3.6 billion euros to the budget, Lescure told RTL radio.
Prime Minister ​Sebastien Lecornu’s government has pledged to fully offset the budgetary impact of measures aimed at helping households cope with the energy price shock triggered by the ​conflict.
Lescure said he would outline plans to freeze some spending at ​a meeting with lawmakers on Tuesday, stressing that the government would stop short ‌of ⁠outright budget cuts.
He added that PM Lecornu would announce new measures on Tuesday evening to help consumers manage higher energy prices, with a particular focus on people who rely on vehicles for work.
France, which ​already has one ​of the largest ⁠budget deficits in the euro zone, can only afford support measures that are strictly targeted at those ​most in need, the government has said. So far, ​it ⁠has focused on emergency fuel subsidies for the transport, fishing and farming sectors.
The government is meanwhile facing pressure from the far right to introduce ⁠a ​costly cut in the 20% value‑added tax ​on fuel, while the hard-left has called for energy prices to be capped.

Reporting by Zhifan Liu, Inti Landauro and Leigh Thomas; Editing by Sudip Kar-Gupta

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