By Jason Hovet
PRAGUE, July 1 (Reuters) - Newly-appointed Czech Prime Minister Petr Necas is set to lead a three-party, centre-right coalition that could have the strongest majority of any government since the country split from Slovakia in 1993.
The three parties -- the right-of-centre Civic Democrats, the conservative TOP09 and the centrist Public Affairs -- have 118 of the 200 seats in the lower house after winning a May election with pledges of austerity and battling corruption.
Necas wants a coalition agreement by early July, and the parties cleared a major hurdle on Wednesday with an agreement on allocating cabinet posts, giving the important finance ministry portfolio to TOP09.
Following are some key risks the expected government faces.
COALITION BUILDING
The harmony of the coalition could be tested often.
The new party TOP09 was created last year by political veterans who are shrewd negotiators. The party won 16.7 percent of the vote in May elections at the expense of coalition leader Civic Democrats, who will not want to be upstaged by TOP09.
The Civic Democrats, with 53 parliament seats, initially resisted proposals to give the important finance minister post to TOP09 Vice-Chairman and former finance minister Miroslav Kalousek.
Public Affairs, entering parliament and the national stage for the first time, is a wild card on many issues.
Chairman Radek John once described the party as neither left- or right-leaning, but whatever best suits the country. They have said they may not end up in the coalition but could support it in parliamentary votes.
What to watch:
-- Coalition talks could still unravel with Public Affairs pulling out and leaving a weaker minority cabinet, although that probability is not high. Public Affairs could stay unpredictable in or out of the government.
-- Will the Civic Democrats be upstaged by TOP09 and its role in the Finance Ministry? This office will take the lead on cutting the budget and managing state assets. Necas said on Wednesday he would head up tax, pension and health reforms.
FISCAL POLICIES/OUTLOOK
The parties have agreed on 54 billion crowns ($2.57 billion) in budget savings for 2011, and aim for a fiscal gap around 4.6 percent of gross domestic product, down from 5.3 percent planned for 2010.
They also want to raise 20 billion crowns in new revenue through scrapping planned tax cuts to meet this target, but have avoided using new or higher taxes.
Analysts and the outgoing finance minister have warned savings should come from a mix of spending cuts and tax rises.
The other parties met Public Affairs' demands last week to find more money for teachers by cutting defence spending.
Czech public debt is half the European Union average at 35.4 percent of GDP -- up from 29 percent in 2007 and rising fast, due largely to rising debt costs and structural problems exposed in the economy's 4 percent contraction in 2009.
The Finance Ministry expects the export-reliant economy to rebound around 1.5 percent in 2010 and 2.4 percent in 2011. However, austerity across Europe could dampen demand for Czech-made goods, hitting recovery and government coffers.
The IMF and OECD have warned Prague it must reform its pension, health and welfare systems. Analysts say these reforms can fix long-neglected problems that could pose a medium-term threat to the 'A' credit score from rating agency S&P.
What to watch:
-- The 2011 budget will set the pace of fiscal consolidation and how quickly the country will move back to the EU's 3 percent of GDP ceiling, targeted in 2013 by the last caretaker cabinet.
-- The right-leaning parties will resist tax hikes as much as possible but may have to give ground to avoid drastic spending cuts.
-- Analysts say cuts that are too harsh could slow recovery or cause a double dip, as the economy is still saddled with weak domestic demand. Austerity elsewhere should hurt export demand.
-- The parties have similar, but varying views on pension reform and any agreement could be watered down.
DISAPPOINTED WORKERS
Czech unions are much weaker than in other central and eastern European countries like Romania, and the government has faced very few labour protests this decade.
But unions, allied with the opposition Social Democrats, could show more muscle amid government plans to slash a number of employee tax breaks and cut public sector wage spending.
This year, transport workers forced caretaker PM Jan Fischer to back down from a minor tax hike on railway workers' benefits.
What to watch:
-- Unions are waiting for government plans to be put on paper before threatening any action.
-- Protests against austerity in western Europe could influence Czech unions.
-- The centre-right parties still have political capital after a strong election win on austerity pledges.
ENERGY POLICY
The next government will see through the country's largest-ever power tender, and will also set policy on the country's future energy mix to meet climate goals and to ensure security of supply.
Power firm CEZ <
>, central Europe's biggest firm, with a market capitalisation of $22.5 billion, is 69.8 percent state-owned and a significant source of government revenue.CEZ has opened a tender to build two units at its Temelin nuclear power plant near the Austrian border, and possibly three more at another domestic site and in Slovakia.
Areva SA <CEPFi.PA>, Toshiba Corp's <6502.T> Westinghouse Electric, and Russia's Atomstroyexport are competing for the deal that could be worth some $24 billion.
The outgoing cabinet has appointed Vaclav Bartuska as its envoy for the tender. Bartuska, who has said he has the centre-right parties' approval, has spoken sharply against furthering the country's energy dependency on Russia.
What to watch:
-- Government involvement in the tender.
-- The government may sell some of the CEZ stake. The Civic Democrats have not ruled this out, but have no concrete plan. * For political risks to watch in other countries, please click on [
] (Editing by Sonya Hepinstall)