Business News
In this week’s Business News: the government seeks to get to grips with corruption; deflation at factory and farm gates; car makers buck the trend with production figures; clothes producer seeks to stave off collapse; and take over fever at Prague’s heating company.
Government seeks to stamp out corruption
The Czech government this week adopted a package of measures aimed at
countering one of the country’s biggest business problems: corruption.
The three-pronged attack will allow the use of undercover police agents,
offer protection against prosecution for key witnesses and introduce
screening of those making decisions about major public tenders. Reports now
say the government also wants tax changes to make it more difficult for
private firms to establish slush funds for paying bribes. The package looks
like facing a fierce battle to get through parliament before elections in
May.
Record price drops at factory gates and for farmers
The Czech Statistical Office has unveiled the extent of the prices
revolution that occurred in the country over the last year, at least at
factory and farm gates. Agricultural producer prices collapsed by around a
quarter in 2009, while goods left factories on average around 3.1 percent
cheaper than a year earlier. The latter is a record decline since figures
started to be compiled in 1991. But prices paid by shoppers and other
purchasers were still on average 1.0 percent higher in 2009 compared with
2008.
Czech car production hits record in 2009
Photo: European Commission
Czech car makers boosted production to a new record in 2009, bucking the
crisis in the industry worldwide. Output increased by 2.85 percent compared
with 2008 to just over 975,000 cars according to figures released by the
Association of Automotive Industries. The main factor was a full year of
production by the Hyundai plant in the east of the country which launched
at the end of 2008. The joint venture plant between Peugeot-Citroen and
Toyota also upped output by 8,200 cars last year.
But the country’s largest producer, Škoda Auto, saw production slip by
84,000 units to just short of 520,000 with some manufacturing shifted to
factories abroad.
Clothes making giant seeks to stave off collapse
The country’s biggest clothes maker is fighting for its survival. OP
Prostějov demanded protection from its creditors last week and has
announced the closure of a third of its 100 outlets in the country and
neighbouring Slovakia. Workers are also on a four day week. The company’s
main problem is that it owes around 1.2 billion crowns to banks. That sum
is about equal to its annual revenues. The crisis manager in charge at the
company is hoping that the current uncertainty will not scare off orders
for Spring collections.
Some like it hot
One of the hottest issues in the Czech energy sector at the moment is the
future of Prague’s heat and power company Pražská Teplárenská. Czech
electricity giant ČEZ agreed to buy a 48.7 percent stake in the business
last year but is still waiting for clearance from Brussels. Originally
rumours were rife that ČEZ was set to sell on the stake to the country’s
biggest heating company, Dalkia. Now though, ČEZ says that it want to keep
its stake. But the plot appears to have thickened with the boss of mining
company Czech Coal now reported to be in talks with Prague city council
over a last minute bid to snatch the heating company stake away from ČEZ.