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Contents | How to obtain this publication | Additional information
The following is the Executive summary of the OECD assessment and recommendations, taken from the Economic survey of the Czech Republic, published on 24 April 2008.
Contents
The strong growth that has emerged in recent years is encouraging and the risks to underlying inflation are manageable. However, there are policy challenges. Most important is a need to ensure fiscal sustainability through public-finance reform to put the economy in a better shape to cope with population ageing. Reforms should entail:
The increased pace of growth is diminishing longstanding problems of structural unemployment. Indeed, it has raised a risk that labour supply constraints will limit economic development. Policy needs to improve incentives to work and accumulate human capital through a broad range of measures:
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Improving general labour market conditions, notably through further shifts in the tax mix to lighten the high burden on labour and reform of notice and severance pay regulations. Part-time and other non-standard types of employment should be facilitated primarily by removing barriers. Direct subsidies should be used sparingly.
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Helping parents combine work and family. Parental leave should be cut back, more resources should be put into supporting childcare services and improvements should be made to tax-benefit incentives for family households.
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Encouraging older cohorts to work longer, not only by increasing the standard age of retirement but also through further adjustment of early and late retirement regulation.
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Further reforming the education system. In secondary schools, there should be wider access to courses that provide options for tertiary courses as well as more benchmarking of schools and students. Tuition fees in tertiary education should be considered.
Rapid growth in export-based manufacturing is a key feature of Czech economic development. Harnessing globalisation largely requires tackling the same issues as those that help economic growth in general.
However, there should be some specific priorities addressing bottlenecks and market failures:
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Ensuring investment incentives are economically justifiable through careful monitoring and adjustment of existing schemes.
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Reforming migration policy to tap into the opportunities created by increased international labour mobility, to help overcome emerging shortages.
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Ensuring good transport infrastructure through effective use of EU-funds, public-private partnerships and the removal of entry barriers into the rail freight market more effectively.
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Supporting “growth poles” by tackling local and regional infrastructure bottlenecks, particularly in the Prague region.
How to obtain this publication
The Policy Brief (pdf format) can be downloaded in English and in Czech language. It contains the OECD assessment and recommendations.The complete edition of the Economic survey of the Czech Republic 2008 is available from:
- Subscribers and readers at subscribing institutions can access the online edition via SourceOECD , our online library.
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Government officials with accounts ( subscribe) can go to the "Books" tab on OLIS
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Additional information
For further information please contact the Czech Republic Desk at the OECD Economics Department at eco.survey@oecd.org. The OECD Secretariat's report was prepared by Philip Hemmings, Alessandro Goglio and Zuzana Smidova under the supervision of Andreas Wörgötter. Resear
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