Slovakia, the `New Detroit,' Turns Carmaking Into Growth Engine

Published: 25 February 2005 y., Friday
Workers on a plateau in western Slovakia are finishing PSA Peugeot Citroen's new 700 million-euro ($921 million) plant, laying rails and paving roads across barren fields to ship 300,000 cars a year to markets around Europe. Peugeot, Europe's second-largest carmaker, chose Slovakia over Poland, where wages are 50 percent higher, at a time when its earnings are being squeezed by record prices for commodities. South Korea's Kia Motors Corp. also will build a 1.1 billion-euro plant in Slovakia, its first in Europe. ``We looked for a place with good infrastructure, access to Central European markets, transit possibilities to Western Europe and a skilled labor force,'' says Alain Baldeyrou, 59, head of Peugeot's Slovak plant. ``All this we found in Slovakia.'' International companies, including Ford Motor Co., pledged last year to invest a record 1.7 billion euros in Slovakia, where wages and taxes are lower than in Poland and the Czech Republic. Sixteen years after the fall of communism, Slovakia is the fourth- fastest-growing nation of the 25-member European Union. U.S. President George W. Bush will see the changes today when he visits Slovakia's capital, Bratislava, to meet Russian President Vladimir Putin in a medieval castle overlooking the Danube River. Prime Minister Mikulas Dzurinda's efforts to ease labor rules and cut taxes are one way in which Eastern Europe has become an engine for growth in the EU. Slovakia, with seven other Eastern European countries, joined the EU last May.
Šaltinis: Bloomberg
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

EBRD and Latvia has signed an agreement on purchase of Parex banka’s shares

EBRD and Latvia has signed Share Purchase Agreements providing that following the increase of equity capital the EBRD will purchase 57,506,825 ordinary shares comprising 25% and 1 share of the Bank's equity capital. more »

Recession gives artist a break

This dreamy scene of money raining down on Wall Street amid a deep recession has given a street artist a big break. Peter Zonis now exhibits his works in the lobby of an office building in New York's midtown Manhattan. more »

Another Five Winners of the Danske Bankas Monthly Scholarship Award have been Announced

During the draw another five winners of the Danske Bankas monthly Scholarship award were announced. more »

During the first quarter of this year the turnover on the accounts of AB Bank SNORAS payment cards grew almost by one-fifth

Within January - March this year, the turnover on the accounts of AB Bank SNORAS payment cards increased by LTL 202 million or 18 per cent and on 31 March this year reached LTL 1.3 billion. more »

Fitch affirms high DnB NORD Bankas creditworthiness rating

Fitch Ratings affirmed AB DnB NORD Bankas short term borrowing rating F1, individual rating “C/D” and the support rating “1”. more »

DnB NORD Bankas revises deposit rates

Taking into account changes on international and domestic money markets AB DnB NORD Bankas has changed individual and corporate customers time deposit rates. more »

ACP-EU Assembly debate centres on food and financial crises and economic partnership agreements

The G-20's response to the world food and financial crisis, and efforts to make ACP-EU economic partnership agreements flexible enough to meet development needs, took centre stage at the 17th session of the ACP-EU Joint Parliamentary Assembly in Prague from 4 to 9 April. more »

Single European Sky: MEPs lead the way to shorter, safer and cheaper flights

European aviation will be governed by more efficient rules, leading to shorter flights, fewer delays and reduced fuel consumption, thanks to the adoption today by the European Parliament of the “Single European Sky II” legislation. more »

Settling accounts

Late payment for work performed, a perennial problem in Europe, is now hampering recovery from recession. more »

International Rating Agency Fitch Ratings has changed Bank SNORAS ratings

On 8th April 2009 International Rating Agency Fitch Ratings has changed Bank SNORAS Long-Term Issuer Default Rating to ‘B+'. more »