Business News
Czech living standards increase, problems with debt also on the rise
A survey carried out by the Czech Statistical Office reveals that living
standards have improved substantially in the Czech Republic, Hospodarske
noviny reports. According to the poll, the number of households who held a
privately owned flat rose to 18 percent in 2005, up from just two percent
in the mid 1990s. The survey also found that one of the indicators of
better living standards was an increased demand for electrical appliances.
The number of households with personal computers, for instance, was 42
percent in 2005 up from two percent shortly after the Velvet Revolution.
One downside of an increase in the standard of living appears and a
concomitant rise in consumer spending appears to be that more people are
facing financial problems. 20 percent of households reported that they
found it difficult to repay loans and ten percent said they could not heat
their homes properly due to a lack of funds.
Civil service clerks most likely to be corrupt say politicians and managers
A new poll of politicians and managers indicates that they feel clerks at
Czech ministries and other central state offices take bribes most
frequently. The poll conducted by research institute Donath
Burston-Marsteller had asked 1200 elected politicians where corruption was
most likely to be found in the Czech Republic. Besides believing that
corruption is most likely among clerks in the civil service, the majority
of respondents also felt that large Czech companies were to blame for the
majority of bribes that are paid. Those polled agreed that corrupt
practices were most widespread in the building industry and the awarding
of public tenders. They also said that they thought the level of
corruption in the country was the same as it had been in 2001.
www.dbm.cz/pruzkumy.
Resurgence of interest in Czech uranium
Uranium mine
Czech uranium has started to attract foreign investors again, despite
recent plans to wind up uranium mining in the country. As energy demands
around the world increase, global uranium prices have grown seven times
over the past ten years. The Czech state-run uranium mine Diamo extracts
300 tonnes of uranium a year. It has now said it would like to find a
partner who would invest over CZK 250 million in geological research to
find new uranium deposits. Any potential expansion of uranium mining in
the country would need government approval before it could go ahead.
110,000 lorries registered in road-toll system
The Czech Republic's new electronic road-toll system has so far registered
around 110,000 lorries on Czech roads from about 50 countries to date,
according to data from Austria's Kapsch firm, which operates the system.
Domestic hauliers from the Czech Republic account for nearly half of all
the lorries registered. The new system was introduced at the start of the
year. Using electronic monitoring devices, it charges trucks and other
vehicles over 12 tonnes in weight a charge according to how many
kilometres they travel on Czech motorways. Around 316 million CZK or
roughly fourteen and a half million US dollars have been raised by the
tolls since January first.
Snow costs CSA 30 million CZK
Ruzyne airport, photo: CTK
The national air carrier Czech Airlines has said that the closure of
Prague's Ruzyne airport due to heavy snow on Wednesday and Thursday cost
it 30 million CZK or 1.3 million US dollar in lost sales. The air carrier
had to cancel 98 flights because of the closed airport. Meanwhile a
spokesperson for the airport said that it spent over one million CZK or
45,000 dollars removing more than 160,000 tonnes of snow. The inclement
weather shut the airport down for a total of 30 hours, its longest closure
in 15 years.






