(Repeats story published late on Wednesday)
PRAGUE, April 28 (Reuters) - The Czech Republic will hold a general election on May 28-29 that looks likely to bring the centre-left Social Democrats to power after a four-year hiatus, handing them the task of slashing a crisis-inflated budget gap.
The election could break a deadlock that has crippled policymaking since an election produced a hung parliament in 2006.
But polls suggest that no strong government is likely to emerge, owing to the fine balance between left and right-leaning voters, and a minority government is a strong possibility.
Here are selected issues to look for in the election.
VOTING RESULTS AND COALITIONS
The Czech Republic has not had a government with a clear majority for over a decade and election results tend to be close, leading to weak governments and frequent policy deadlock.
The Social Democrats hold a 7-9 percentage point lead over their main rivals, the centre-right Civic Democrats, but will almost certainly need coalition partners to control a majority of parliament's 200 seats. [
]They could form a minority government backed by votes of the far-left Communists, a party deemed unacceptable by most in the political spectrum, which has not had any share on power since the end of its totalitarian rule in 1989.
A close result could lead to a grand coalition of the two biggest parties, the Civic Democrats and the Social Democrats, a development analysts say could hamper decisive reforms.
Success of new small parties, derived from voter dissatisfaction with a series of graft scandals in the main parties, could alter the picture, possibly opening the way for a centre-right coalition. Some of the small parties have been gaining strength in recent polls.
What to watch:
-- Close result could unnerve financial markets, lead to lengthy coalition-building, possibly a grand coalition
-- If the Social Democrats and the Communists between them win more than half of the seats, a minority Social Democrat cabinet backed by the Communists is likely.
-- If the two win less, a centre-right coalition is possible
FISCAL POLICIES
The Social Democrats have pledged to hike taxes on firms and higher wage earners to cut the budget gap to 3 percent of GDP in 2013 from 5.9 percent last year, but promise a generous welfare agenda and euro entry by 2015.
Analysts say taxes will not be enough to help balance a budget that faces pressures from the financial crisis -- the economy shrank 4.1 percent in 2009 -- and more importantly is weighed down by long-neglected structural problems which pose a medium-term threat to the country's 'A' rating from S&P.
The IMF and OECD have warned Prague it must reform pension, health and welfare, and changes should focus on spending rather than tax. [
] [ ]The Civic Democrats have said they would not raise taxes and have promised to cut the budget deficit to 3 percent by 2012 via spending cuts. They pledged to balance the budget by 2017.
Fiscal tightening is key to taming the growing debt pile, which is expected to reach 39 percent of GDP this year, up from 29 percent just two years ago but still half the EU average.
What to watch:
-- Social Democrats may scale back welfare plans, back off from euro entry target
-- Coalition partners may limit left's tax hike plans
-- 2011 budget will define speed of fiscal consolidation, market trust in the strong crown currency
-- Pensions: left rejects need to reform the system which analysts and international institutions say is headed for ever greater deficits.
ENERGY POLICY AND REGULATION
The Social Democrats have lashed out at utilities, promising to bring down power prices through tougher regulation. They have also said they would tighten regulation of telecoms and push for lower bank fees.
Power firm CEZ <
>, central Europe's biggest company with market capitalisation of $26 billion, is almost 70 percent state owned and a significant source of government revenue.The Social Democrats have said they would raise dividend payments to fund a one-off bonus to pensioners.
CEZ is also running the biggest tender in the country's history to order up to five nuclear power station units.
The government will play a crucial role in the deal, estimated by Czech media as worth 500 billion crowns ($26 billion) and may influence which of three bidders -- Areva SA <CEPFi.PA>, Westinghouse Electric, a unit of Toshiba Corp <6502.T> and Russia's Atomstroyexport -- wins the project.
What to watch:
-- Proposals for special CEZ dividends
-- Political involvement in nuclear tender
-- Pressure on power, telecoms prices through regulation (Reporting by Jan Lopatka; editing by David Stamp)