Things are going to shit in France. All of the schools where I work are losing students in large numbers because of stupid government decisions, I am losing work and very few people care about it apart from the end users – students and teachers.
France has always been heavily over-bureaucrated, something I may have mentioned before; my favourite statistic is that whilst 11% of the UK workforce is employed by the Government there, in France it’s 24%. These numbers may be out of date now, but the principle holds – France is an expensive place to run. Also: Too Good To Check (old tabloid journalist saying).
This is now biting them in the ass; because there is No Money the government has reduced the bonus companies received for employing apprentices drastically, in some cases from €8 000 to €1 000. Other benefits have also disappeared for employers, so many are no longer taking on apprentices, interns and other starter-type employees.
One school where I work has cancelled 40% of its courses; another has reduced face-to-face teaching hours by 25%, making students do the extra hours in their own time online; and a third won’t be opening until next October because the bureaucratic hassles involved mean that they won’t have their paperwork finished by January as they’d hoped, losing me five whole days work; and a fourth has just cancelled an entire course because there were only two students left taking it. This means that I and the other seven teachers who taught these students have each lost six whole days of work between now and the end of the academic year, but that’s not the worst thing. “Where are the students going to go to finish their course?” I asked the director. She shrugged. “I don’t know.” (*1)
Luckily, she and the other administrators in the school – it’s owned by a local big city’s Chamber of Commerce – are all going to keep their jobs and they are, even as you read this, diligently marketing the school to students for the next academic year. Well, they will as soon as their Christmas holidays are over. And this is the same school that begged and begged me to go and work for them when I really didn’t want to, making me shoe-horn classes into impossible slots and undertake a 100 km round trip to get there.
It is a very short-sighted attitude, as Any Fule Kno. Get in some AI now to take over those apprentice jobs and only hire people with five years experience is the current mantra, in teaching like everywhere else. Except, of course, soon no one will have five years experience, or even one year in work. Schools cutting teaching hours where their reputation for top graduates matters will find companies complaining that, all of a sudden, the students from that school can’t speak English any more, for example. You can write your own consequences here because they’re obvious to anyone wearing spectacles.
I learned a long time ago from French friends that the first, and indeed sometimes only, job of bureaucrats is to keep their own job. This is why so many interactions with them are completely stupid, even useless. They will email back an Excel spreadsheet which needs a date changing instead of doing it themselves; they will return your file because it is missing a piece of paper – a piece of paper they never asked you for in the first place – sometimes even asking for a piece of paper which simply doesn’t exist; they will demand something urgently and then auto-reply that they’re now on holiday until next year.
France is facing a massive financial crisis, the peasants are revolting, the Government can barely govern, everyone hates the President and this all feeds into the second national sport, after bureaucratising: Moaning. Everyone moans, no one does anything about it. Ever.
For example, when he was elected for the first time in 2017 Macron promised an extra €300 million or so for autistic children. Where did that money go? Who knows. France has had four Autism Plans since 2005, the last finishing in 2022. Since then? Probably has an important piece of paper missing from its folder. But no one who matters is interested in anything beyond the headlines acclaiming the initiative – Brigitte Macron I’m giving you the Paddington Stare – so nothing happens except people continue suffering.
On a personal level it puts me in a difficult position where I will barely have enough work to sustain my opulent lifestyle next year. So, if you hear of anything, do let me know. Cheers.
*1 – Two administrators came to explain to the 3rd year class I was teaching yesterday why the first year of their course was being abandoned. Two of them. To explain why they didn’t have the money available to teach two students. Irony is alive and well and living in French schools.



























































