Business News
Government to support Škoda producing regions
The Czech Finance Ministry has announced plans to offer financial support
to regions which manufacture Škoda cars. The planned 1.4 billion crown
package will be used to improve infrastructure in those regions, mainly
with road building projects. According to the government, poor
infrastructure conditions are preventing companies like Škoda from
continued development in manufacturing areas of the country. Under the
terms of a proposed agreement, the government will invest in the regions of
Vrchlabí and Mladá Boleslav as soon Škoda formally confirms its plans to
itself invest in those regions.
Czech Airlines struggles with high fuel costs
Troubled national carrier Czech Airlines is not only struggling with a
decrease in premium paying customers, but also standard ones too. And now,
high fuel prices are also taking their toll. A spokesperson for the company
has acknowledged that rising fuel costs will cost the company hundreds of
millions of crowns this year. An ongoing restructuring plan has led the
troubled carrier to hope that it may turn in a profit this year, but the
fuel price crisis may mean that the company again posts losses. A tender
for the privatisation of Czech Airlines was issued this month, with rumours
that the Russian airline Aeroflot may be interested in buying the company.
There has been some good news for ČSA - the company recently retained its
first place as the most reliable in Europe in terms of keeping to its
departure times.
Czechs shopping for groceries in Germany
It is a situation that would have been unthinkable only a few years ago
– in fact, the complete opposite was the norm, but now it seems, many
Czechs are traveling to Germany to purchase cheaper groceries than they can
buy in their own country. Czechs living in border towns near Germany are
insisting that even with the added cost of traveling over the border,
groceries can still be bought around twenty to thirty percent cheaper than
in the Czech Republic. Meanwhile, Germans are no longer coming across the
border to shop as much as they used to - now merely focusing their
purchases on cigarettes, petrol and some Czech-specific food items. The
flip around in prices can be partly attributed to the strong crown, though
analysts predict that the situation will not last.
Household debt growing faster than savings
New figures released by the Czech Finance Ministry suggest that debts are
increasing faster than savings for many Czechs. In 2007, Czech household
savings grew by 10 percent to 2,300 billion crowns, while debts rose by
around thirty percent to 774 billion. Despite the rise in debts, the
figures clearly show that Czechs are still keen savers, with the Finance
Ministry figures revealing that most of them have their money saved in
current accounts or to a lesser extent pension funds rather than more
complex options in the financial markets. Also, most of these debts are
accumulating due to household-related investments, which is viewed as a
positive sign. In comparison with other EU countries, the Czech Republic
ranks among the states with the lowest ratio of household debt to GDP.
Gas prices set to skyrocket
Photo: CTK
Gas prices in the Czech Republic are set to rise by as much as fifteen
percent next year. The biggest Czech supplier RWE Transgas is to raise
prices by 9.6 percent. Another major provider E.ON is to raise prices by
fifteen percent. Prices have already been steadily increasing for gas
customers this year, by a figure of around seven percent. The reasons
behind the price rises are actually connected to rising petroleum prices
– as gas is often extracted as a by-product in oil fields.







