Business News
In this week’s edition of Business News: hotel and guest house visitors stay away; Prague airport predicts doubling of passenger numbers; home construction sector sees more completions but fewer new starts; Škoda Auto ponders low cost large car; and a new Czech brew from across the border.
Hotels and pensions suffer visitor decline in 2009
Photo: www.czechtourism.com
Czech hotels and guest houses suffered a 6.0 percent drop in guests and a
5.7 percent fall in overnight stays in 2009 compared with 2008 according to
the national statistics office. The trend in the last quarter of the year
showed no sign of recovery with the same 6.0 percent decline in guests and
a larger 7.5 percent drop in overnight stays. The only bright spot among
the figures was an increase in the number of nights spent in four- and
five-star hotels. Among foreign visitors, there were big increases in
Austrians and Spaniards, with the numbers of Russians and British visitors
down by almost a quarter.
Prague airport predicts doubled passenger figures within decade
Such figures have not dented the optimism of managers at Prague’s
international airport. They estimate passenger traffic at the airport will
almost double within 10 years to reach 21.2 million annually. Last year
11.6 million passengers passed through Ruzyně airport. That was the first
fall in numbers over the last decade. The expected take off in passenger
numbers depends on the building of a new runway which would boost capacity
beyond the existing 16.5 million passengers a year.
Fewer home construction projects in the pipeline
Meanwhile, there is mixed news from the construction sector. The number of
new flats and houses completed in 2009 was actually 0.4 percent up on 2008.
The total of flats completed last year actually exceeded the number of new
starts for the first time in the last 15 years. But the trend in fewer new
starts continued at the end of last year, with a 21.2 percent drop in the
last quarter compared with the same period in 2008. Other construction
sectors show more activity in the pipeline with the value of new planning
permissions during the year up an estimated 4.3 percent.
Škoda Auto eyes cheap low cost large car
Škoda Octavia
The country‘s biggest car producer Škoda Auto is seeking to produce a
cheap large car that would make use of components from past models of its
best-selling Octavia model according to the Czech daily Dnes. It says the
idea is at the stage of a working plan but suppliers have already been
sounded out over whether they can supply the parts. The paper says the car
would cost around 260,000 crowns, or just under 14,000 US dollars, which is
around a third cheaper than a basic Octavia model. The paper says the
concept of a new model with hardly any new research is inspired by the
success of the Logan produced by Dacia in Romania.
Czech beer makes comeback from across the border
The western border town of Cheb will celebrate the return of its local
beer this weekend after a 17 year interruption. The local brewery was
closed down in 1993 by one of the big brewers as part of its
rationalisation. The revival of Cheb’s Hradní lager is part of the local
micro-brewery revival, or rather will be. The catch is that the beer will
at first be brewed not in the Czech Republic at all but by a brewery eight
kilometres across the border in Germany. But the brewers say it will use
local water and the prices will be more Czech than German. Limited brewing
facilities for the Hradní beer in the centre of Cheb are still being
prepared.






