If you feel like, in these days of vacation, taking the course of a coach,

who would promise you to refine your silhouette, to get you in shape and

make you more agile, would you agree to blindly follow the

prescribed requirements, painful exercises and austere punishments of an obese

coach? No, obviously; you would ask him to begin to apply to himself his own

advice before providing it to others.

It is however what the State asks us today: not avaricious of its advice, of

its authoritarian advice, to the taxpayers, to the consumers, to the

employees, to the voters, to the citizens: save more, consume better, do not

smoke any more, reduce your alcohol consumption, oil; agree, to save your

company or your retirement, to work longer hours, to reduce the increase in

your wages, to move; accept even flexibility, fluidity, precariousness,

vulnerability. It is a question, of survival for the country, we are told.

Very well; and some of these adviceS deserve to be followed. But what really

does the one who claims to direct the life of others do? Few things. Far too

little. And when he does them, they are poorly done. For example, the

replacement, often justified, of a civil servant in two leaving for

retirement,  and fewer branches in the Central Administrations, penalize

sometimes far too much the social ministries; and they would be better

received and more effective as part of an overall reform of state functions,

which would also prevent the current drain of talents in the the high civil

service. For the rest, nothing is making progress: the necessary merger of

the public agencies has advanced very little in certain organizations

(Chambers of commerce, 1% housing, courts, vocational training

organisations) and not at all in others (social housing offices, communal

and departmental administrations). Nothing is launched either to implement

the computerization of the public services worthy of what is done elsewhere.

And if these reforms are not progressing, it is not, as we hear it, to

maintain the quality of the public service, which is deteriorating, but not

to touch the privileges and the private income of a few prominent

citizens who are the only beneficiaries.

Finally, supreme daring, they speak also, about financing the extension of

these wastes, with a new loan, which will naturally be financed, ultimately, by

those who are asked today to accept the reform of their lifestyle and the

reduction of their purchasing power.

This is obviously unacceptable. And the least that the State can do is to

make the commitment, as a sign of goodwill, to refund this new loan, and

serve the interests of its debt through savings on its lifestyle. They were

already studied in details and we know very well what a greater efficiency can

bring in managing public services.

It is during the summer, when the budget is fixed for next year, that

everything can still be decided. If nothing is done, the citizens could one

day dismiss their coach. And take charge.