A look at the many perks of public life in France
- Public servants earn well and live better in France
- Among the perks: free taxi rides, rent-free apartments
- National education system houses 40,000 teachers - for free
- Forty-three of France's 157 ambassadors receive salaries of of $353,000 a year. The French magazine Challenges says some French ambassadors make up to $548,785 a year if serving in "dangerous" postings, such as Kabul.
-Challenges also reports 656 civil servants earn more money than the French president and the prime minister, who are each paid $233,785 annually. More than half of the civil servants work abroad for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
- Directors of elite public high schools in Paris live in rent-free apartments, some as big as 1,280 square feet.
- Government ministers ride the train system in first-class seating for free.
- Members of the elected National Assembly ride taxis for free.
- The national education system gives free housing to more than 40,000 employees, including many teachers.
- The head of Lycée Henri-IV, a public high school in Paris that prepares well-connected students for France's most elite public universities, has a free apartment with a private garden that would typically rent for $19,600 a month. The head of Lycée Louis-le-Grand, another public school in Paris for the elite, has a similar deal.
- About 150,000 French civil servants receive cars for both work and personal use.
- Prefects, similar to police commissioners, get free housing with servants. Figaro newspaper reports that the prefect of Gers lives in a 18th-century palace; the prefect of Paris lives at the Hôtel du duc de Noirmoutier with 16 servants, while the prefect of Marseilles has a residence and a villa with a swimming pool.
Research by Yves Stefanovitch