Economists thought French unemployment would fall last quarter. It rose instead, jumping to 8.1% in the first quarter of 2026, the first time the rate has crossed 8% in five years.
The data comes from INSEE, the country's statistics agency. About 68,000 more people fell out of work over the three months, pushing the total jobless count to roughly 2.6 million.
The Iran War Found France Already Weak
The headline is the jump above 8%. The bigger story is that France was already losing steam before global news turned ugly.
The euro area's second-largest economy was on soft footing heading into the Iran conflict. Now energy prices are higher, hiring is slower, and the unemployment number is climbing in the wrong direction.
INSEE did flag one technical quirk. Nearly half the rise in unemployment over the past five quarters comes from a law that requires people on minimum welfare benefits to register as job seekers, which lifts the rate without the underlying job market changing as much as the number suggests.
Even with that statistical effect stripped out, the trend is still in the wrong direction.
For more sharp reads on what global moves like this mean for your money, Market Briefs covers it every weekday, plus you get a free investing masterclass when you join.
A Hit To Macron's Track Record
President Emmanuel Macron built much of his economic case on cutting joblessness. His labor reforms helped push unemployment to a 40-year low in early 2023, while in his re-election campaign he set a target of getting close to full employment, around 5%, by the end of his second term.
He's now heading in the opposite direction with about a year left to go.
The rate is still well below France's 2015 peak of 10.5%. But the symbolic line is the 8% mark, and the country just crossed back over it.
Worth Watching
The next question is whether the rise was a single bad quarter or the start of something longer.
INSEE's job market check is the best signal investors have on the French consumer. If unemployment keeps climbing, retail spending and housing will feel it next, since wages are the engine of both.
The rate crossed 8%, and the clock is running on Macron's second term.
For daily reads on what global news means for your portfolio, join 350,000+ investors reading Market Briefs, the daily comes with a free 45-minute investing course as a bonus.
