Barbados - country.
Publié le 04/05/2013
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Barbados is served by a public library system centered in Bridgetown.
B Culture
The culture of Barbados combines English institutions, which evolved through more than three centuries of English rule, with a folk culture of African origin.
Because ofits English traditions, Barbados is sometimes called “Little England.” Cricket has traditionally been the national game, and the island has produced some of the sport’sgreatest players.
Water sports including surfing, swimming, snorkeling, and sailing are also popular.
The music and dances of Barbados reflect more purely the African heritage and feature African rhythms and musical instruments.
The island also has shared in theemergence of West Indian art forms, particularly music, and there are a number of steel bands.
Many of the older churches, sugar plantation houses, and buildings inBridgetown are of historical and architectural interest.
The island’s main festival, Crop Over, celebrates the end of the sugar harvest.
This summer festival features parades and calypso competitions and the ceremoniousdelivery of the last sugarcanes on a brightly colored cart pulled by mules.
There is a toast to the sugar workers and the king and queen of the crop are crowned.
InFebruary, the Holetown Festival commemorates the landing of the island’s first settlers in 1627.
The Oistins Fish Festival, held at Easter, is a street fair that celebratesthe fishing town of Oistins and the fishing industry.
Two Barbadian writers have greatly influenced other writers in the Caribbean: novelist and essayist George Lamming and poet, historian, and essayist KamauBrathwaite.
Lamming’s novels, beginning with the semi-autobiographical In the Castle of My Skin (1953), deal with the problems of defining one’s own values within a system and ideology imposed from outside.
This issue of how to deal with the legacy of colonialism has since concerned many Caribbean writers.
Brathwaite, a foundingmember of the Caribbean Artists Movement, pursues this dilemma within the context of the region’s African heritage, seeking a definition of the Caribbean people, theirfaiths, language, and ancestry through works such as his trilogy The Arrivants (1973), and the collections Mother Poem (1977), Sun Poem (1982), and X/Self (1987); he has spent time in Ghana seeking to clarify his ideas.
See also Caribbean Literature.
IV ECONOMY
The economy of Barbados traditionally relied on growing sugarcane; processing it into refined sugar, molasses, and rum; and exporting these sugarcane-derivedproducts.
However, by the 1970s tourism had become far more important to the economy.
In the 1980s and 1990s the government sought to further diversify theeconomy by encouraging foreign financial institutions to establish operations in Barbados and by creating a favorable environment for the establishment of newmanufacturing industries.
The gross domestic product (GDP) for Barbados was $3.43 billion in 2006, or $11,711 per person, one of the highest per capita GDPs in LatinAmerica.
GDP is a measure of the value of all goods and services a country produces.
A Agriculture
The agricultural sector, historically the backbone of the economy, is today small, contributing along with forestry and fishing 3.6 percent of GDP and employing about 3percent of the labor force.
Sugarcane remains the leading crop of Barbados, although annual production has steadily declined since the 1960s due largely to low pricesand production inefficiencies.
Many growers have sold their land for housing or tourism developments.
The sugarcane harvest in 2006 totaled 410,000 metric tons.Other crops include vegetables and fruit grown primarily for local use.
Fishing has increased in importance.
B Manufacturing
In addition to processing sugarcane and other locally grown farm products, manufacturing plants in Barbados produce paper products, furniture, chemicals, clothing,and household appliances.
Computer components and building materials are also manufactured, and an oil refinery in Bridgetown processes petroleum.
C Services and Tourism
Service industries, including tourism, are the most important sector of the economy of Barbados.
They account for nearly three-fourths of the GDP and employ morethan half of the workforce.
Many international companies have registered in Barbados, and their operations contribute revenue to the local economy.
Many NorthAmerican firms, most notably insurance companies and airlines, employ well-educated Barbadians to enter data into computerized records.
Tourism is a major contributor to GDP and a major employer on Barbados.
Most tourists stay on the southern and western coasts.
A large number of visitors come fromthe United States, Canada, and the United Kingdom.
In addition, cruise ships dock at a terminal in Bridgetown.
D Currency and Trade
In 1972 a central bank was established and a new unit of currency adopted, the Barbados dollar (2 Barbados dollars equal U.S.$1; 2006 average).
The bank of issue is the Central Bank of Barbados, founded in 1972.
Barbados imports more goods than it exports, yet in most years its foreign earnings from services in tourism, finance, and data entry enable it to achieve a surplus inits account balance.
Budget revenues in fiscal year 2004 totaled $966 million; expenditures were $1,234 million.
Barbados is a member of two free-trade organizations,the Caribbean Community and Common Market (CARICOM) and the Association of Caribbean States (ACS).
The establishment of these organizations created a widermarket for Barbadian goods.
E Transportation and Communications
Barbados is well served by roads but has no railway system.
Nearly all of its 1,600 km (1,000 mi) of roads are paved.
An international airport is located at Seawell in thesoutheast, and scheduled flights connect the island with Europe, North America, and South America.
The coast of Barbados lacks natural shelter for ships, but anartificial deepwater harbor at Bridgetown was opened in 1961.
The island is served by passenger and cargo services to Britain, other West Indian islands, and theUnited States and Canada.
Barbados has 2 daily newspapers.
The government-run Caribbean Broadcasting Corporation provides radio and television programming, and a number of commercialradio stations also operate.
V GOVERNMENT.
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