French consumer confidence jumped in February, to its highest level since yellow-vest protesters started their weekly demonstrations, as households took heart in an improvement in their finances and unemployment fears receded.
The reading of 95 points marked the highest level for the consumer confidence index since October, which was the month before yellow-vest protesters started weekend marches against high living costs and President Emmanuel Macron's policies.
The increase in the index by the national INSEE statistics office, which beat the average forecasts of economists, came as Macron's costly measures to boost workers' income and quell the protests kicked in this month.
In December, the French leader decided to speed up an increase in benefits received by the poorest workers, halt a planned rise in fuel taxes, and reduce taxes on overtime, for a total cost of €10 billion ($11.35 billion).
Rising Confidence
"The French consumer is recovering quickly," said Pictet economist Frederik Ducrozet. "Confidence is rising post-gilets jaunes, as Macron's stimulus measures kick in and unemployment fears recede."
The national statistics office, INSEE, reported that the number of consumers who had observed an improvement in their finances in the past year had increased, while more of them also expected the increase to continue in the future.
Households' fears of unemployment also dropped markedly this month, INSEE reported.
France's unemployment rate fell unexpectedly at the end of last year, to its lowest level since the start of 2009, official data showed earlier this month.
Brighter Outlook
The brighter outlook is good news for Macron, whose popularity has started to recover from its worst level, at the peak of the yellow-vest crisis in December.
The 41-year-old leader has launched a series of debates across the country, aimed at reconnecting with voters, particularly in rural areas.
Weekly yellow-vest marches continue every Saturday, but turnout has fallen and support for the movement among the broader public as waned, polls show.
Named after the fluorescent jackets that motorists must keep in their cars, the grassroots yellow-vest protests started in mid-November, as a revolt against high prices at the pump, before morphing into a broader challenge to Macron's pro-business policies.
News by Reuters, edited by ESM. Click subscribe to sign up to ESM: European Supermarket Magazine