| TRENDS >
Written by: Anita Lišková
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INSURANCE: Czech workers taking
more and more sick days
The average Czech employee spends nearly 31 days a year on sick
leave, and this number is still rising. This high rate increases
production costs and decreases productivity. In 2002 government
expenditures on sick leave and other benefits reached CZK 32.6
billion. The labor and social affairs ministry has prepared an
amendment to the law on disability benefits and intends to introduce
a new system of such benefits starting no later than 2006. Between
2004-2005 the reform should save the state 15% of its current level
of support - i.e., nearly CZK 9.2 billion. For example, under the
reform the disability rate should drop from today's 50% to 25%,
and the decisive period for calculating benefits should rise from
three months to one year. According to the ministry, the proposed
changes should help prevent the misuse of disability benefits and
contribute particularly to a decrease in short-term sick leave.
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HOUSEHOLDS: Household borrowing
still on the rise
Consumer loans for households are one of the fastest developing
financial services in the Czech Republic. According to Czech National
Bank statistics, since 1999 household indebtedness has been rising
by about CZK 20 billion per year. In March 2003 individuals' debts
to banks reached CZK 165 billion, and because the indebtedness
rate of the Czech citizenry is relatively low compared to the rest
of the world, specialists expect significant increases in the future.
Installment sales firms are also recording increasing numbers of
clients. For example, Home Credit Finance, which this May joined
ČSOB in offering all-purpose loans at Česká pošta branches to reach
as many people as possible, enjoyed record sales of CZK 5.6 billion
in 2002. According to Pavel Plachký, Home Credit Finance's director,
there is also a visible shift in the types of goods purchased on
installment plans: "Interest has shifted from "black
technology" to "white technology", furniture, and
household appliances."
ECONOMY: Will investors go elsewhere?
The Czech Republic will soon have increased competition in attracting
foreign investment, not just from cheaper countries like the
Ukraine to the east, but also from its neighbors, Poland, Slovakia,
and Hungary. This is due not only to ever more expensive labor,
but to corporate income tax rates as well, and the 15% tax on
dividends that these countries are trying to eliminate. While
in the Czech Republic the corporate income tax shouldn't drop
from its current 31% to 24% until 2006, Slovakia plans to push
through a 20% rate next year. The planned flat corporate income
tax in Poland should start out at 24%, and in Hungary some entrepreneurs
can even qualify for the 18% rate. Although the finance ministry
isn't afraid of investors leaving, according to analysts the
existing proposed tax reform isn't radical enough.
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