Business News
Czechs call new EU agriculture policy unsatisfactory, but a step in the right direction
Petr Gandalovič
After months of talks, the EU agreed upon new agricultural policy on
Thursday – without Czech support. Agriculture Minister Petr Gandalovič
said that he was not entirely satisfied with the talks’ end result, but
that the new policy was a step in the right direction, and a great
improvement upon the original proposals. Mr Gandalovič was praised in
Prague for the concessions he secured. The agriculture minister said that
farms receiving more than 300,000 euros in subsidies each year would now
see that rate cut by four percent, as opposed to the nine percent
originally suggested, while farms receiving less money would not see their
subsidies cut at all. The Czech delegation also hoped to negotiate the
country’s share of EU agricultural funds up to the level of the union’s
oldest member states. On Thursday, Mr Gandalovič said that this had not
been achieved, but that the Czechs were now to receive some extra funds.
Lukoil seeks to buy stake in Czech refineries
The world’s second largest privately-owned oil firm, Lukoil, has said
that it wants to expand further into the Czech market by buying a stake in
several Czech refineries. Head of the company Vagit Alekperov told
Hospodářské noviny on Friday that at the moment his firm sold the
majority of its oil in a crude state, and that he wanted Lukoil to expand
further into the refinery side of the business. The firm already owns
refineries in Ukraine, Bulgaria and Romania, and earlier this year bought a
49 percent stake in Italy’s second largest refinery. Lukoil currently has
44 petrol stations in the Czech Republic, and this year, won the contract
to provide airplanes with fuel at Prague’s Ruzyně airport.
Servisbal Obaly voted Business of the Year
Packaging firm Servisbal Obaly has won the Czech Business of the Year
award. The results were announced on Thursday, after months of
deliberation. The jury chose the Eastern Bohemian packaging firm for its
profitability, productivity and expertise, with one member of the panel
praising the company for even being able to package airplanes for export.
Second in the competition was Building SP, a specialist in construction
materials. The prize for Entrepreneur of the Year went to butcher Jaroslava
Klemensová from Dolní Benešov, while franchise ‘The Pub’ won in the
new category of Business Rebel of the Year, for its customer-friendly
prices in the face of stiff competition.
Over a half of Czechs find it hard to get by on current income
More than 50 percent of Czechs find it difficult to get by on their
current income, suggests a poll conducted by the CVVM agency. Some six
percent of the poll’s respondents went as far as saying that they found
it very difficult to survive on the money they earned alone. The poll found
that the social groups with the biggest financial problems were pensioners,
unqualified workers and those who left school without gaining a final
certificate. CVVM suggested that a high proportion of these people either
tended to vote for the Communist Party or not at all. Those on the other
end of the spectrum, who told the agency that they felt themselves to be
well-off, were often self-employed, university graduates and company
managers who, the agency suggested, tended to vote for the Civic Democrats.
Visitor numbers at Czech hotels down in third quarter
The number of foreign visitors staying in Czech hotels was up in the third
quarter of this year, but the picture, however, wasn’t all that rosy for
Czech hoteliers. Guest numbers in the country’s hotels were down slightly
in the third quarter with a sharp decline in the number of Czech guests
opting to holiday at home. The only sections of the industry to measure a
rise in visitor numbers were high-end four- and five-star hotels.
Campsites, hostels, chalets and other cheaper facilities which usually
prove popular amongst Czechs were said to have suffered the most from the
sharp drop in domestic tourist numbers. The figures are supported by data
from the Association of Czech Travel Agents which suggests that more Czechs
than ever before are choosing to holiday abroad.







