Business News
Major reform package proposed by Czech Government
The biggest business story this week has been the Czech government's
controversial new financial reform package. The proposed reforms include a
fifteen-percent flat tax as well as an increase in the lower VAT rate from
five to nine percent. There will also be lay-offs in the state sector and
social-spending cuts, affecting things like sickness and unemployment
benefits. Critics say that the reforms won't make much difference to
people's incomes and are not radical enough to reduce the country's budget
deficit. The government's proposals will now go before parliament in
August or September.
Minister wants to cut spending on transport infrastructure
In keeping with the government's efforts to cut public spending, Transport
Minister Ales Rebicek has announced that he plans to reduce the country's
transport infrastructure fund by nearly twenty-five percent over the next
two years from fifty nine billion Czech crowns to forty billion Czech
crowns over the next two years. At the same time, an expert conference
held in Prague this week on transport in the Czech Republic concluded that
at least one hundred billion Czech crowns or four point eight billion US
dollars was needed to maintain and improve the country's transport
network.
Forbes Magazine: CEZ biggest firm in Central Europe
Czech power giant CEZ is the biggest firm in Central Europe according to
Forbes Magazine. The American publication placed CEZ in 453rd place on its
list of the 2000 largest public companies in the world, an improvement of
almost 200 places on its position in a similar poll conducted by the
magazine last year. Record earnings and an increase of nearly thirty
percent in CEZ shares are the main reasons behind the firm's improved
Forbes ranking.
Sharp rise in sales of new passenger cars
There has been a sharp increase in the sale of new passenger cars in the
Czech Republic. Car sales increased by an extraordinary 9.2% in the first
quarter of 2007. Altogether 30,105 cars were sold in this period. Skoda
still has the biggest share of the Czech market, accounting for 11,595 of
the new cars purchased, although the Czech firm's overall market share
fell from 41.4% to 38.5% percent. Analysts attribute the rise in car sales
to the Czech Republic's improving economic situation.
McDonalds enjoys record growth Czech revenues
Fast-food chain McDonalds has announced a record growth in revenues in the
Czech Republic. Its year-on-year sales grew by 13.2% in 2006 to just over
two and a half billion Czech crowns or one hundred and twenty million US
dollars. Mac Donalds, which runs 72 outlets in the Czech Republic, did not
open any new restaurants last year but still managed to attract seven and
a
half million more customers. Altogether, more than 44 million people
visited a McDonalds outlet in the Czech Republic over the course of the
year.





