Business News
OECD says Czech Republic could catch up with Western Europe prosperity in ten years
OECD Secretary General Angel Gurria, photo: CTK
The Czech Republic is one of the world’s ‘economic bright spots’
suggests a report by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and
Development released on Thursday. The OECD praised the Czech government for
its recent public finance reforms package, though suggested that more would
have to be done to prevent a collapse of the country’s pension system.
Speaking in Prague on Thursday, OECD Secretary General Angel Gurria
recommended that the retirement age be raised to 66 or 67, to curb the
effect of ‘fast ageing’, with two generations of baby-boomers readying
themselves for retirement in the next couple of decades.
The OECD predicted 4.5 percent growth for the Czech economy this year, and 5 percent growth in 2009. According to the organization, the Czech Republic could catch up with West European levels of prosperity within a decade if such strong levels of economic growth continue.
Shares in Czech coal mining firm to be listed on London Stock Exchange
Shares in the Czech Republic’s largest coking-coal mining company are
set to be listed on the London Stock Exchange, it was announced on
Wednesday. The listing is set to generate as much as 1.1 billion pounds
(2.18 billion USD), which would make it the most valuable share offering on
the London Stock Exchange this year. New World Resources is the sole owner
of the Czech Republic’s largest coking-coal mining company OKD AS. It is
set to debut on the London Stock Exchange on May 8 with shares set at
between 10.75 and 13.25 pounds each. The coal company said it is raising
capital to expand further in one of Europe’s biggest and still largely
untapped coal deposits, the Silesian basin in southern Poland and the
northeast of the Czech Republic.
Czech firms spend nearly 50 billion crowns on advertising in 2007
Czech companies spent nearly 50 billion crowns (3.1 billion USD) on media
advertising last year. This is a record amount, though growth was slower
than in previous years. Nearly half of the money spent went on television
advertising, with TV Nova receiving the lion’s share of the proceeds,
followed by commercial TV Prima, with state broadcaster Czech Television
coming in third. The printed press generated nearly 20 billion crowns from
advertising, while radio stations brought in about a fifth of that amount.
The biggest spender on advertising in 2007 was Telefonica O2, followed by
its rival Vodafone.
Cigarette prices to rise in Czech Republic
Now here’s news that might leave smokers fuming… The price of
cigarettes is set to go up in the Czech Republic as tobacco producers
exhaust supplies they amassed before the government’s tax reforms came
into effect at the start of the year. Under the new excise system, the
price of a packet of cigarettes is expected to go up by around 8 CZK
(around 50 cents). A spokesperson for Imperial Tobacco said that the time
had come when the new higher excise tax would have an impact on the market,
although it is thought that rival Philip Morris will be the first to raise
prices. Over one billion packets of cigarettes are sold in the Czech
Republic each year, roughly a fifth of them are bought by foreign tourists.





