Czechs start voting in a general election today, and the man looking to return as prime minister is promising they will have more cash to spend, businesses will pay less in tax and spending on infrastructure will increase. Opinion polls suggest billionaire opposition party leader Andrej Babis is likely to get the first shot at forming the next government. His campaign has channeled Donald Trump, replete with red baseball hats and soundbites about putting Czechs first. He wants the country to remain in the European Union, but make membership work better for the export-oriented economy. All well and good, economists and critics say, but his plans need to be financed. Handouts to retirees and young families, for example, go against the current mantra of fiscal conservativism, they say. The economic plan signals a break with policies that have been so key for incumbent Prime Minister Petr Fiala’s administration. While the Czech budget is now among the healthiest in Europe, the economic recovery since the pandemic has been slow and eaten into the government’s popularity. Babis, 71, and his people have said it’s time for Czechs to stop “fiscal self-flagellation.” Babis, who made his fortune from the agribusiness he built into one of the biggest private employers in the country, has another pillar of his economic program that will cost money. He wants to trigger a government buyout of 30% of power utility CEZ, as my colleague Peter Laca wrote. The plan sparked a big rally in the company’s shares, making the purchase more expensive (even if CEZ actually pays for it). It would also be a major blow to the Prague Stock Exchange after a string of other de-listings. In a country grappling with shortages of childcare and retirement homes, no high-speed rail lines and sluggish progress on new houses and highways, the plan to grow the economy more quickly is resonating with voters. What looks sure is that the end of the Czech austerity era may be nigh. Is Babis coming back? Photographer: Milan Jaros/Bloomberg |