Business News
Minimum wage to rise from July
The Czech Republic's minimum wage is set to rise from 334 dollars to 351
dollars a month in July, the labour minister, Zdenek Skromach, said this
week. He said this rise would motivate people to choose a low-paying job
ahead of social benefits. The Labour Ministry estimates 2 to 3 percent of
Czech workers will actually earn the minimum wage. It is far short of the
average salary, which stands at almost 900 dollars a month.
Spending on insurance slows
Household spending on insurance in the Czech Republic is lagging behind growth in incomes, according to the Czech Statistical Office. It says even the flooding which hit large parts of the country in 1997 and 2002 did not spur Czechs to invest more into insuring their property.
Plzensky Prazdroj to make big investments over next half decade
The Czech Republic's largest brewer, Plzensky Prazdroj, is to make
considerable investments over the next five years, one of its senior
managers said this week. Of a total of almost 200,000 dollars, up to 70
percent will be invested in the company's main plant in Plzen. The rest
will be used to buy new tanks for fermentation and ageing for its Radegast
and Velke Popovice breweries. Plzensky Prazdroj is part of the SAB Miller
group. It sold over 10 million hectolitres of beer in the last financial
year.
Elections, football contribute to slight rise in web visits
Nearly 4.4 million people visited Czech internet sites in May, slightly up
on the figure for the previous month. Experts attribute the rise to the
general elections, the World Cup - and bad weather. The most popular Czech
site in May was the search engine Seznam, followed by the news site
Novinky, which is connected to the daily Pravo.
Lower VAT on coffee, tea to come into force as of July 15
Lower VAT on coffee, tea and chocolate confectionery will come into force
on July 15, the Finance Ministry said on Friday. Dealers have indicated
that prices will fall but not by the full 14 percent. Under the new law,
only alcoholic beverages will remain in the basic 19 percent VAT bracket.
Ruzyne's profit up by 45 percent
Prague's international airport, Prague-Ruzyne, made a net profit of 1.432
billion crowns (63.34 million dollars) in 2005, a 44.9 percent jump from a
year earlier, according to director Hana Cernochova. Turnover at the
airport - the busiest in Central Europe - increased by 5.0 percent to
4.385 billion crowns (193.9 million dollars), Cernochova said. The airport
expects a profit of around 1.0 billion crowns this year. Prague airport
became the busiest airport of the 10 countries that entered the EU in 2005
after passing the 10 million passenger mark. A total of 58 airlines
offering 118 destinations currently operate there.
New Czech phone company created through merger
A new Czech phone company, Telefonica 02 Czech Republic, is to be created
on July 1 from the merger of fixed line operator Cesky Telecom and its
wholly-owned mobile unit Eurotel, company directors announced Wednesday.
Cesky Telecom CEO Jaime Smith said that most of the rebranding for the
merged unit should be completed by the end of the year. In the first year
of its existence the new company will merge sale and customer care, in the
second year it will focus on the domestic market segmentation and in the
third year on IT integration. Telefonica of Spain bought Cesky Telecom
last year, and now controls 70 percent of the company. Telecom is the sole
owner of Eurotel.
Three in four Czechs fear euro will bring higher prices
Despite the reassurances of economists, three in four Czechs are afraid
prices of goods and services will go up after their country switches to
the euro. This view was expressed not only by opponents of the euro, but
also by two-thirds of its advocates. The official target date for adoption
of the euro is 2010.
Inventec Appliances to build a support centre in the Czech Republic
Inventec Appliances, a producer of electronic parts, is planning to build
a support centre worth about 100 million crowns in the Czech Republic,
according to the DigiTimes web daily. "The construction of a support
centre would be followed by the construction of a plant to assemble
electronic equipment," DigiTimes says, adding the plant could be
completed at the end of this year. Inventec Appliances produces video
iPods for computer maker Apple.





