Targeting tech

Published: 1 January 2004 y., Thursday
Although this country has become a favorite with foreign investors seeking to build production plants in Central Europe, experts say this trend is currently undergoing a dramatic change. Instead of car plants and smoke-belching factories, they say, in the near future the Czech Republic will become a haven for foreign companies hoping to expand in the technology and services sectors. In the last six months, investor interest has become increasingly focused on two sectors besides the traditional engineering and manufacturing fields: technology, media and telecoms; and health care/pharmaceuticals, according to research by Deloitte & Touche. Potential investors in these sectors are attracted for the same reasons as industrial investors: a skilled and low-cost labor force, a prime location in the middle of Europe and an improving economy. DHL, one of the world's largest logistics companies, plans to invest 500 million euros (16 billion Kc/$615 million) over five years in a new data center in Prague. The company has already started constructing the building and will launch trial operations in May. The center will employ 400 workers at first, a total that in two years will rise to 1,000. The company decided to move its IT operations from Britain and Switzerland to Prague because of this country's skilled and cheaper work force, as well as the nation's developed infrastructure, said DHL general director Stephen McGuckin. Labor costs in the Czech Republic are only 40 percent of those in Western European countries. U.S. oil giant ExxonMobil will follow DHL's lead and build an administrative center in Prague to service its European operations. The center will open next April with 300 employees. Although the company has not officially announced the move, local recruiters have already started their search for IT specialists and finance staff. DHL and ExxonMobil are not the only companies importing tech services. Indian IT firm Infosys is considering entering the Czech market in 2004. The company is mulling opening a center in Brno through a daughter company. The center would provide Infosys' services to European firms. The potential volume of the investment and the number of jobs it would create have not been made public.
Šaltinis: The Prague Post
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Joint Statement on Greece by EU Commissioner Olli Rehn and IMF Managing Director Dominique Strauss-Kahn

Mr. Olli Rehn, European Union Commissioner, and Mr. Dominique Strauss-Kahn, Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), issued the following joint statement on Greece. more »

World Bank Supports Urban Development in Bhutan

The World Bank today approved a $12 million IDA credit to Bhutan, designed to improve infrastructure services in parts of the capital city of Thimphu where no formal services are currently available. more »

Reform of the Common Fisheries Policy high on the agenda at events in Spain

Fisheries ministers and stakeholders alike will be discussing the future shape of the EU's Common Fisheries Policy at two major events in Spain over the next days. On 2 and 3 May, in La Coruña, the Commission and the Spanish Presidency are organising a large stakeholder conference on the reform of the Common Fisheries Policy. more »

IMF’s Regional Outlook Shows Asia Leading Global Recovery

Asia is leading the global recovery and the region’s contribution to global growth will continue to exceed that of other regions in the next two years, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) said today in its latest Regional Economic Outlook (REO) for Asia and the Pacific. more »

EBRD supports development of green energy in Poland

The EBRD is supporting the modernization of the electricity distribution network and the development of renewable energy sources in Poland with a PLN 800 million loan (equivalent to approximately €205 million) to the Energa energy group in order to help the company strengthen its power grid. more »

Baltic Development Forum 2010

At the beginning of the summer this year, Vilnius will become the capital of the Baltic Sea region. On 1-2 June 2010, the city will host the Baltic Sea States Summit and the Baltic Development Forum (BDF) Summit. more »

Visit Lithuania by a Hot Air Balloon at the World EXPO 2010 in Shanghai

Visitors of the World Expo 2010, which will open in the Chinese city of Shanghai on May 1st under the slogan “Better City, Better Life” and will last for 184 days until the end of October, are kindly invited to get into a hot air balloon at the Lithuanian Pavilion. more »

SEB Bank Group Lithuania Result

According to preliminary data, unaudited net loss sustained over the first quarter of the year 2010 by SEB Bank is LTL 59,4 million (EUR 17,2 million) and that by SEB Bank Group is LTL 80,3 million (EUR 23,3 million). more »

Globalisation fund unemployment aid - a good tool, but far too slow

European Globalisation Adjustment fund (EGF) aid must be delivered faster and more simply to unemployed workers hit by the financial crisis or globalisation, concluded the Budgets and Employment committees after evaluating the fund on Wednesday. more »