Competitiveness

This section feature research, opinion and progress reports on how the Czech Republic compares to other EU countries economically. It includes analysis of international rankings such as the WEF and World Bank.

Spotlight issue

19th December 2017 / Competitiveness / Employment and Social Affairs


ETUI: Job quality in Czechia increased: 'It remains to be seen whether this improvement is sustained in the following years and to what extent it can be linked to technological advances that promise greater autonomy and control for workers.'

In 10 EU countries job quality was poorer in 2015 than a decade earlier. The worst decline was seen in Greece, the biggest improvement in Czechia. Read more in the new Working Paper titled: 'Bad jobs’ recovery? European Job Quality Index 2005-2015' published by ETUI, European Trade Union Institute.
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18th December 2017 / Competitiveness / Technology, R&D and Innovation


EC 2017 EU Industrial R&D Investment Scoreboard

According to the European Commission, the world's top 2500 industrial companies created more jobs, with a 1.7% increase in the number of employees, reaching 53 million in total in 2016. An important number of these world's top industrial R&D players are based in the EU (567 out of 2500; with 822 in the US, 365 in Japan, 376 in China and 370 in the rest of the world).The 567 EU based companies employed 18.8 million persons, 2.2% more than the year before, and companies with headquarters in the EU increased rheir R&D investment by 7% over 2016.
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18th December 2017 / Competitiveness / Business and Industry


Czech Companies are more Afraid of Workforce Shortage than Cyber Attack or Damage to their Reputation

Czech companies see the most significant risk for their operations in workforce shortage. It is followed by an increase in administrative burden and dishonest behaviour of employees such as crime, theft or fraud. These are the results of the qualitative Corporate Risk Management Survey for 2017 that Aon conducted in the Czech Republic for the first time. The comparison with its Global Risk Management Study that Aon has prepared on a worldwide level for many years shows that Czech organisations significantly differ from companies operating in other parts of the world both in the perception of the significance of individual risks and the approach to their management. Only 1 out of 10 Czech companies have their own risk management department. 
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Members of the American Chamber of Commerce in the Czech Republic