Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
06PRAGUE2
2006-01-03 09:43:00
CONFIDENTIAL
Embassy Prague
Cable title:  

NEW CZECH DEPUTY PM FOR ECONOMIC AFFAIRS JIRI

Tags:  ECON EINV PGOV PINR EZ 
pdf how-to read a cable
VZCZCXYZ0005
RR RUEHWEB

DE RUEHPG #0002 0030943
ZNY CCCCC ZZH
R 030943Z JAN 06
FM AMEMBASSY PRAGUE
TO SECSTATE WASHDC 6785
C O N F I D E N T I A L PRAGUE 000002 

SIPDIS

SIPDIS

STATE FOR EUR/NCE AND INR/EC

E.O. 12958: DECL: 01/03/2016
TAGS: ECON EINV PGOV PINR EZ
SUBJECT: NEW CZECH DEPUTY PM FOR ECONOMIC AFFAIRS JIRI
HAVEL IS NO MARTIN JAHN

REF: 05 PRAGUE 1586

Classified By: Acting Pol/Econ Counselor Karen Reider for reasons 1.4 b
+d

C O N F I D E N T I A L PRAGUE 000002

SIPDIS

SIPDIS

STATE FOR EUR/NCE AND INR/EC

E.O. 12958: DECL: 01/03/2016
TAGS: ECON EINV PGOV PINR EZ
SUBJECT: NEW CZECH DEPUTY PM FOR ECONOMIC AFFAIRS JIRI
HAVEL IS NO MARTIN JAHN

REF: 05 PRAGUE 1586

Classified By: Acting Pol/Econ Counselor Karen Reider for reasons 1.4 b
+d


1. (U) Czech Deputy Prime Minister for the Economy Martin
Jahn left office as expected December 31. Jahn is expected
to begin working for an unnamed private sector firm in
February; he is rumored to be assuming a position on the
managing board of Skoda Auto. Jahn's replacement is Jiri
Havel, Chairman of the Czech Power Utilities (CEZ)
supervisory council, member of the ruling Social Democratic
Party's (CSSD) national economy commission, and former head
of the National Property Fund (FNM). President Klaus
approved Havel's appointment on January 3. Havel will have
to give up his chairmanship of CEZ's supervisory board before
taking up the position as Deputy PM.


2. (SBU) While analysts agree that Havel is academically well
qualified for the job, his appointment is seen as based on
his loyalty to CSSD and personal friendship with PM Paroubek.
Analysts point out that Havel has less experience in the
business sector than Jahn who, prior to his appointment, was
head of CzechInvest. According to media reports, during his
days as a student, Havel was a member of the Communist Party.
In the early 1990's Havel unsuccessfully tried to establish
a left-leaning party called Independent Left. Havel entered
politics in 1998 as an adviser to then-finance minister Pavel
Mertlik (CSSD),who in 1999 appointed Havel to FNM
management. Havel is currently a member of the CSSD, but
will not run for the Chamber of Deputies in the mid-2006
elections.


3. (U) BIOGRAPHIC DATA: Born August 20, 1957. Educated at
Prague Economics University, Political Economy Faculty, 1982.
June 2005 until present: Chairman of Czech Power Utilities
(CEZ) supervisory board. April 2001 until present: Lecturer
at the Institute of Economic Studies at Charles University
Social Sciences Faculty. January 2003 until June 2005:
member of the Unipetrol Board. March 2000 until April 2001:
FNM Chairman. 1999 until March 2000: FNM executive committee
member. He is the author or co-author of numerous specialist
economic publications on capital markets and economic
transformation.

4. (C) Comment: FDI inflows into the Czech Republic doubled
in 2005, and many would say this was due in large part to
Martin Jahn. Jahn was a favorite of the business community
and a positive face for the CR abroad. But in fact, his
legacy is mixed and his departure from government was no
surprise. Jahn's greatest achievement was passage of the
Commercial Registry reform, which had long been championed by
the business community (with the AmCham in the lead) as a way
to streamline business creation. He devoted countless hours
to bankruptcy reform, which remains ontrack but unfinished.
However, he and his hand-picked staff (nearly all of whom
will leave government with him) developed extensive reform
measures to help the CR meet the EU's Lisbon criteria and
generally complete the long-overdue economic structural
reforms; none of this has been implemented. Given his
limited political influence within the Paroubek government,
his departure is not seen as a harbinger of any shift in
economic policy. In fact, the shift has been underway for
some time. In his final months in office, Jahn was powerless
to stop the pre-election spending increases that forced the
Central Bank President to issue a rare public protest late
last month. The question is whether Havel, as a CSSD
insider, will be even more accommodating of this economic
loosening, or will perhaps be more successful in convincing
Paroubek of the long-term dangers. Either way, like Jahn in
recent months, Havel is expected to play a limited role in
policy making.
DODMAN