Karlovy Vary Spa hotels, Czech Republic – apartments, pensions, accommodation, bed and breakfast, travel, tours, tourism

Accommodation in Karlovy Vary

- ***** 5 - stars
- **** 4 - stars
- *** 3 - stars
- ** 2 - stars
- Hostels
- Apartments
- Pensions

- In the city centre
- Near the city centre
- Out of the city centre

- Airport Transfers
- Sightseeing Tours
- Karlovy Vary Guide
- Czech News
- Travel Links


Spas and Spa hotels in Karlovy Vary, Czech Republic

04.08.2008 - Germany's Economy Set for Long Downturn, Experts Say

In an interview with German daily on Monday, Aug 4, the head of the Munich-based Ifo Institute for Economic Research, Kai Carstensen warned that the mood among businesses was grim.
"Companies' expectations for the next six months are terribly bad," Carstensen said.
Though order books are full right now, there are no new orders, Carstensen warned.
"The upturn will definitely be over in winter.

The Czech Republic news are represented by www.karlovy-vary-czech-republic.com

Many companies will gradually start cutting back on production and also lay off staff."
The newspaper reported that German companies rated their order situation to be the worst in two years.
Bildunterschrift: German FM confirms 2 Germans kidnapped in Nigeria ...
Germany rejects PKK demands for hostages ...
Siemens Mulls Plans to Cut 15,000 Jobs ...
Germany Ready for Faceoff With Austria, Says Coach Loew ...
Less Crime, More Juvenile Offenses in Germany ...
Großansicht des Bildes mit der Bildunterschrift:   Germany's metal industry is worried about getting new orders Germany's engineering and electronics employer group, Gesamtmetall also voiced worries about the effects of a cooling global economy.
"The global economic slowdown is increasingly affecting the metal and electronics industry," Gesamtmetall President Martin Kannegiesser told
. "In many companies, there's enough work to last only until the end of the year."
"Heading towards zero" The news comes on the heels of top German carmakers showing signs of suffering from the global downturn.
Last Friday, BMW said it would miss its 2008 targets, following rival Daimler with a profit warning as soaring oil and raw materials costs combined with a faltering US economy begin to bite the auto sector.
"The downturn will last longer and hit harder than companies have so far assumed," Deutsche Bank's Chief Economist Norbert Walter told newspaper
on the weekend. "On the labor market, there will be bad news during the whole of 2009."
German joblessness fell by 20,000 on the month in July to 3.250 million. However, economists say falling unemployment will soon be overtaken by developments in the broader economy and warn that the buoyancy of the labor market will not last.
Buffeted by the global credit crisis, a weakening US economy and soaring prices for oil and raw materials, the clouds over the German economy have  grown since the start of the year.
"The idea that we can continue to grow briskly with the few countries that are ticking along is unrealistic, in light of the numerous countries that are no longer ticking along," Walter told 
. "For years we had double-digit growth rates in exports, now we are heading towards zero," he added.
Growth slower in euro zone than in the US Analysts have already begun reversing downward their growth projections for Europe's largest economy.
The German Finance Ministry said last week that German gross domestic product (GDP) shrank considerably in the second quarter after a strong start to the year, when Europe's largest economy expanded at its fastest rate since 1996.
Bildunterschrift: Großansicht des Bildes mit der Bildunterschrift:   Retail sales in Germany have fallen amid a downbeat mood among consumers German business daily
said that based on a survey of 10 leading German and international banks and research institutes, big German companies will have to reckon with shrinking profits this year. Hopes that Europe could isolate itself from the economic crisis in the US have evaporated, the paper said.
Instead, current forecasts show that both economic growth and rise in profits in the euro zone in 2008 may be slower than in the US, the paper said.
The experts surveyed by the paper expect growth of just 0.9 percent in the euro zone for next year as against 1.5 percent in 2008 and 2.7 percent in 2007. In June, the European Central Bank had forecast a growth rate of 1.5 percent for the euro zone in 2009.


(Deutsche Welle)


more info >>

<< Back

Search

Check-in
 
Check-out
 
Room
Class
Location



 
 

Karlovy Vary spas, resorts, baths, thermal and spa treatment procedures, Czech Republic hotels reservation, lodging, booking

 
Copyright © 1999 - 2008 Karlovy-Vary-Czech-Republic.com. All Rights Reserved    
www.PragueTravelGuide.info :: www.Prague-CzechRepublic-Hotels.com
_______________________________