After a decade of slow growth, rising unemployment and dwindling competitiveness, France elected a president on Sunday who says he has a plan to pull the country out of its economic malaise.

Emmanuel Macron, a former investment banker who quit the government of Francois Hollande twice out of frustration with the slow pace of reforms, is promising to overhaul the labour market, simplify the tax and pension systems, while paring back regulations he says hamper innovation.

But as he gets set to enter the Elysee Palace following his defeat of far-right candidate Marine Le Pen, the 39-year-old former economy minister faces daunting obstacles.

He will be trying to push through his reform agenda at a time when France is more divided than ever over how to respond to the disruptive forces of globalisation.

The election campaign showed that nearly half the country would prefer a dirigiste approach to the economy in which the role of the French state is expanded rather than shrunk, as Macron proposes.

In order to have a chance to implement his plans he will have to secure parliamentary backing. That will depend on how his uproven new party, En Marche! (Onwards!), does in legislative elections next month.

And even if he does get the majority he needs, it is likely that many of his reforms could take months, or even years, to produce results.

Delays could expose Macron and his government to the same political backlash that ultimately pushed Gerhard Schroeder, the chancellor responsible for Germany’s “Agenda 2010” reform drive, out of office a dozen years ago.

“Macron is promising an incremental approach whose success will depend on negotiations with the unions,” said Gilles Moec, chief European economist at Bank of America Merrill Lynch.

“I understand the strategy, but it is not one that will deliver immediate results. It will take time to bed down.”

Macron’s economic programme, put together by Jean-Pisani Ferry, the former head of Brussels-based think tank Bruegel, eschews the “shock-and-awe” approach of his defeated centre-right rival Francois Fillon, which included radical public sector job cuts and an extension of the statutory working week.

He wants to save €60 billion over five years

Instead he is charting a more nuanced course that his advisers say is better suited to addressing the root causes of France’s economic troubles. Many independent economists agree.

Macron will not scrap the controversial 35-hour workweek, as Fillon promised. Instead he plans to get around it by allowing firms to negotiate in-house deals with their employees on working hours and pay. He has signalled that he could fast-track his labour reforms through parliament via executive order.

On pensions, Macron has no plans to hike the official retirement age of 62. Instead he wants to unify France’s confusing web of pension plans over time by moving to a Swedish-style points system in which payouts are tied to contributions people pay in during their working lives.

Macron’s approach to reducing the size of the French state is also measured. He wants to save €60 billion over five years compared to €100 billion in Fillon’s plan. A cut in corporate tax rates to 25 per cent from 33 per cent would be phased in gradually.

Sylvie Goulard, a member of the European parliament who has advised Macron during the campaign, likens the approach to someone who does half an hour of sports every day.

“It may not seem like a lot, but if you are disciplined about it, if you do it right, then it pays off. And it’s better for you than running a marathon,” she said.

Macron’s gradual approach could reduce the risk that politically dangerous street protests – the scourge of many a French president – will end up undermining his agenda.

But it has also left him vulnerable to criticism from conservatives who believe the French economy needs a far bolder reform jolt after what many view as a lost decade.

Hollande spent his first two years in office satisfying old-school socialists in his party with symbolic steps like a wealth tax, before shifting belatedly to a business-friendly reform agenda overseen by Macron and ex-prime minister Manuel Valls.

Hollande’s predecessor Nicolas Sarkozy managed to raise the retirement age, but did little else before becoming engulfed in the global financial crisis and euro zone turmoil. Before that, crippling street protests in the mid-90s forced Jacques Chirac to abandon his reform plans.

Without quick results on the economy, Macron could also struggle to deliver on another of his big promises: convincing Germany to agree to a “grand bargain” for Europe involving closer integration of the euro zone.

Working in his favour, however, are two developments.

One, the French economy is already improving, with consumer sentiment at its highest level in a decade and business confidence near a six-year peak. Though France’s unemployment rate remains high, at close to 10 per cent, the economy has been creating jobs at its fastest pace in nearly a decade.

“France is already on the right track,” said Holger Schmieding of Berenberg Bank, noting that steps taken in the past two years have vaulted it to the top of the OECD’s structural reform rankings.

Another positive development is a shift in the French trade union landscape that could make it easier for Macron to deliver reforms of the labour market.

“For the first time there is a possibility of a reformist majority within the French unions,” said Moec of Bank of America Merrill Lynch. “It could make negotiations more efficient.”

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