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DBpedia 2015-10

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Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { ?s ?p "Martin Potůček, PhD. is Czech university professor, public policy analyst, journalist.In the past, he studied the teleonomic qualities of differentiated social actors, processes of cultivating and utilising human potential, and factors influencing health and health policy. At present, his research concentrates on the processes of public policy formulation and implementation in the Czech Republic (and particularly the regulatory functions of the market, the government, and the civic sector), on the problems of public administration reform, on European integration processes, and on the development of visions and strategies for the Czech state. As an author/co-author and editor/co-editor, he published 23 scientific books and three textbooks (in four cases as their single author), ca 70 articles in scientific journals, and more than 90 research papers and policy project reports until the end of 2009.Since 2013, Martin Potucek is Head of Pension Reform committee. The committee is extremely controversial and not taken with respect from the society after admittedly failing with the decision to cancel the 2 Saving Pillar (volunteer overpay to private entities using part of the income tax insurance). That decision will reduce the pension savings to large number of tax payers and enforce them to poor life at the expense of other society members that contributed less to the system. On top of that Potucek as director make an organizational plan for the committee consist of 70 members. The idea to collect representatives form all political parties and institutions led to a complete stall of the organization, as no decision can be taken on time.Controversy: Martin Potucek was accused that his pay for the Pension Reform Committee is 100,000 CZK per month (an equivalent of EUR 4000 as per 2013 rates). This was taken as an abuse by nearly all political parties, media and worker organizations. meanwhile, in Czech Republic, the maximum pension is 17,000 CZK per month. Having that fact, Potucek was numerous times accused in hypocrisy and being a "fake socialist - millionaire". Among with the pay in Pension Committee, he has full time role in the Charles University, where he his incomes are exceeding 1Mn CZK per year. His age of 66 makes him above the retirement age and technically he should live on the maximum of 17,000CZK per month. His opponents often state that mr. Potucek is taking 10 times more pension per month than the maximum allowed, working on 2 positions and refusing to explain how he is managing them both."@en }

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