At the end of 2019, France’s national wealth amounted to EUR 16,421 billion, equivalent to 8.3 times its net domestic product (NDP) for the year (see Chart 1 and Box 1). The wealth-to-NDP ratio exceeded the previous highs of 2011 and 2018 (8.1 times NDP for those years). National wealth grew at a slightly higher rate of 4.8% in 2019 compared with 4.4% in 2018 (see Table 1). As in the previous year, the non-financial component was buoyed by consistent growth in the value of land underlying buildings and structures (+6.6% after +6.2% in 2018). In 2019, both financial assets and liabilities rose at a much higher rate than in 2018 (+9.3% and +9.2% respectively, after +0.6% and +0.8% the previous year), fuelled by the rebound in equity prices. France’s financial net worth amounted to EUR 125 billion at end-2019.
In 2020, the Covid-19 crisis is expected to have had an impact on national wealth: in the first half of the year, household net worth was driven upwards by an increase in net lending, while non-financial corporations’ net borrowing also rose (see Box 2).
1 Household wealth was buoyed by the rise in equity prices
At the end of 2019, household net worth totalled EUR 12,561 billion or 8.8 times household net disposable income (see Chart 1). After slowing markedly in 2018, it rose sharply in 2019 (+6.2% after +2.1% previously; see Table 2 below), fuelled by a rebound in financial wealth.
Household non-financial wealth expanded by 4.2% in 2019 (after +4.5% in 2018) to a total of EUR 8,451 billion. Household non-financial assets consist primarily of real estate (buildings and land which account for 92% of total non-financial assets), the value of which grew at a slightly lower rate than in 2018 (+4.0% after +4.5% in 2018), despite the strength of land prices. Household investment in dwellings continued to grow at a modest rate (+3.3% in 2019 and 2018) while prices of buildings and structures slowed (+1.0% after +1.9% in 2018).
Overall, household financial net worth increased by 10.4% after falling by 2.6% in 2018. On the asset side, households continued to favour bank savings products. Growth in currency and deposits accelerated to 5.8% from 4.6% in 2018, buoyed by a rise in overnight deposits and passbook savings. In the persistent low interest rate environment, household debt security holdings continued to fall, albeit at a more moderate rate than in 2018 (–7.0% after –14.4%).