Business News
In this week’s Business News: Škoda Auto to remain in luxury range; government turns off funding for solar power; central bank fines major high street bank for misleading customers; steelmakers see slow recovery; and work time increases for employees.
Škoda Auto says will be follow up for Superb
Škoda Superb
Leading Czech carmaker Škoda Auto is going to stay in the luxury car
market when its current top of the range model, the Superb, is phased out.
Company managers say that a replacement model will be lined up within five
years. The auto trade press had speculated that there would be no follow-up
model at all, or just a downmarket version of the Superb for taxi fleets.
That speculation had been fuelled by criticism from Škoda Auto’s parent
company, Volkswagen, that sales of the Czech car was eating into the market
for its own models.
Government puts roof on solar power support
The Czech government has taken yet another step to curb the country’s
solar power boom. It has passed a proposal this week which would remove
generous support for facilities built on agricultural land and only offer
it for solar panels installed on roofs or on buildings. The Minister of
Industry says the move could prevent around 700 MW of solar power capacity
coming on line. Further steps, such as tax changes, are promised by the
government to curb the boom which threatens to increase electricity prices
for companies by as much as 30 percent next year.
ČSOB fined for misleading post office customers
ČSOB
The Czech National Bank this week imposed a 3.0 million crown fine on one
of the country’s biggest retail banks, ČSOB, for presenting false and
misleading information to customers. It said that the Belgian-controlled
banking group gave the impression that its post office based banking
operation, Poštovní Spořitelna, was a separate, independent entity when
it is in fact a fully integrated part of the group. ČSOB has come under
attack on another front over the deal to operate out of post Office, with
the new minister of the interior suggesting the contract running until 2017
should be renegotiated to get more money for the Post Office.
Steelmakers see slow recovery from crisis
Czech steelmakers have predicted a slow climb out of the crisis that cut
production by a fifth last year. The head of the Association of Foundries
said this week that he expects annual production growth of around 5.0
percent over the coming years, with a return to pre-crisis levels of output
in five to six years. On the upside, he said that the crisis had taught the
surviving companies to cut costs, be more flexible and find new markets.
Germany is still the biggest market though, taking around 80 percent of
Czech steel production.
Working day extends for employees
Most Czech employees are working longer hours according to the national
statistics office. The number of workers regularly putting in less than 40
hours a week fell by around a quarter of a million between the first
quarter of 2008 and the first quarter of 2010. But those putting in more
than 40 hours rose by around 120,000 over the period. The trend for
businessmen was in the opposite direction with more working shorter hours.
The statistics office said young people starting up part time businesses in
parallel with other work partly explained that figure.






