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Written by: Anita Lišková
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ECONOMY: Czech companies suffering
from excessively rapid wage growth
In addition to a strong crown and weakening demand for goods, Czech
companies must also now deal with record wage increases. In the
third quarter of 2002, the average monthly gross paycheck rose 7.4%
year-on-year to CZK 15,442. With strikingly low inflation (just
0.7%), real earnings rose at the highest rate in the last three
years. According to analysts, the change has been too rapid, outstripping
work productivity. The situation was similar three years ago, but
at that time the Czech economy was gathering significant steam in
the aftermath of a recession, while today economic growth is a mere
1.5%. The result: in the near future, we can anticipate a noticeable
rise in unemployment.
HEALTH: Promoting better health
A new government program, called Good Health for Everyone in the
21st Century, is intended to significantly influence Czech lifestyles.
The primary focus will be to change eating habits and physical condition,
with stress also placed on cutting down automobile traffic and associated
emissions. Two key targets will be tobacco and alcohol. The government
plans to officially recommend limiting alcohol consumption to six
liters of pure spirit per year per capita, down from the current
10, and to promote a ban on the advertising of alcohol and tobacco
products. Also, soldiers, professional drivers, and chemical or
power industry employees will be more frequently subjected to on-the-job
alcohol testing. The stated goal of the program is to adopt a healthier
overall lifestyle by 2015.
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SOCIETY: The changing face of
the average family
According to the Czech Statistical Office, what does the typical
Czech family look like? Based on census information gathered in
2001, it's evident that Czech families are splitting up and getting
smaller. Although the census showed that the typical family has
two children, in the near future, say statisticians, this will be
reduced to only one. The majority of families live in 3-room flats,
while a full third of the citizenry lives in towns and cities with
populations of 50 000 or more inhabitants. The number of children
born out of wedlock is increasing (in 1991 it was roughly 8,5%,
in 2001 the number was 22%), while after divorce a child most frequently
lives with the mother. Yet, the number of single fathers taking
care of their children jumped a third since the beginning of '90s.
Even though in the last ten years the number of nuclear families
diminished by 180 000, they still make up 71% of the population.
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