Business News
Economy grows by record 6.5 percent
The Czech economy grew by a record 6.5 percent in 2007, according to
figures released on Friday. That means GDP growth has reached 6 percent or
more for three years in a row. Economists have attributed that success to
increases in consumption, investment and foreign trade.
Central bank head puzzled by continued firming of crown
Zdeněk Tůma, photo: www.cnb.cz
The Czech crown, which has firmed by 6 percent since the start of 2008,
this week again set record highs to both the euro and the dollar. But
the governor of the country’s central bank told an economics conference
he was puzzled by the trend; Zdeněk Tůma said there were no objective
reasons for the current fast appreciation of the crown and that he expected
a correction. Mr Tůma said in past years the crown had weakened in
anticipation of dividend outflows, and it was likely to do so again.
Czech firms pay out record dividends, with two thirds going abroad
David Marek
In related news, Hospodařské noviny reported on Friday that Czech firms
had paid out a record CZK 158 billion in dividends last year, with over two
thirds going abroad. Economist David Marek told the newspaper the record dividends were due to
the expansion of production and export capacity backed by foreign
investments. As well as fast economic growth the volume of dividends was
boosted by retained earnings from previous years.
Kellner makes top 100 on Forbes billionaires list
Petr Kellner
The richest Czech Petr Kellner is now among the 100 wealthiest people in
the world. Kellner is ranked 91st in the Forbes magazine 2008 list of the
world’s billionaires, up from 119th last year. The man behind the PPF
investment group has total assets of USD 9.3 billion, according to Forbes.
But he could be even richer: his closest partner at PPF Jiří Šmejc said
the magazine had obviously underestimated Kellner’s wealth.
Food exports up 85 percent in five years
Czech food exports have grown by 85 percent in the last five years, the
state agency CzechTrade said this week. Most interest comes from the Czech
Republic’s neighbours, as well as former Soviet countries and southeast
European states.
Food quality symbol leads to increased sales for producers
Meanwhile, a food quality symbol system introduced on the Czech domestic
market five years ago seems to be working: food producers which have
attained the KLASA quality certificate record rises in sales of around one
third, Právo reported. A survey suggested around 80 percent of consumers
regard the KLASA symbol positively, while producers say it makes their
foodstuffs more attractive to retail chains.







