Costa Rica - country.
Publié le 04/05/2013
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protection from future deforestation is not guaranteed.
Deforestation places Costa Rica’s rich biodiversity in danger.
The country’s location on the cusp between Northand South America and its abundance of tropical forests make it home to a great variety of species, many of them rare and threatened.
Deforestation also contributesto the country’s problematic rate of soil erosion.
Costa Rica is party to international treaties concerning biodiversity, climate change ( see Global Warming), endangered species, hazardous wastes, marine dumping, and wetlands.
III PEOPLE
A majority of the people of Costa Rica are of European, largely Spanish, ancestry.
Whites and mestizos (people of mixed Spanish and Native American ancestry) account for about 96 percent of the population; the small black community is largely of Jamaican origin.
About 38 percent of the population is defined as rural.
Spanishis the official language, but English is also spoken by many people, including most of the ethnic Jamaicans.
Roman Catholicism is the state religion, but freedom ofworship is guaranteed by the constitution.
The population of Costa Rica (2008 estimate) is 4,191,948, giving the country an overall population density of 83 persons per sq km (214 per sq mi).
A Principal Cities
The capital is San José, which had an estimated population in 2005 of 1,489,237.
Important cities include Alajuela (1,014), a center for the production of coffee andsugar; Cartago (6,086), a commercial and transportation hub; Puntarenas (26,913), a major Pacific seaport; and Puerto Limón (18,714), a trading center and theprincipal port on the country’s eastern coast.
The cities of San José, Alajuela, and Cartago are located on the fertile central plateau.
B Education
Costa Rica has one of the highest rates of literacy in Latin America, estimated at 96 percent.
Primary and secondary education is free, and attendance is compulsorybetween the ages of 6 and 15.
In 2000, 551,465 pupils were enrolled in 3,711 primary schools and 255,600 students attended public and private secondary schools.
The prominent University of Costa Rica in San José was founded in 1843.
It has an annual enrollment of about 29,000.
Other public universities include the NationalUniversity (founded in 1973) in Heredia and the Technological Institute of Costa Rica (1971) in Cartago.
Costa Rica also has several private universities.
C Culture
Costa Rica, with a relatively small Native American population, has been strongly influenced by the culture and traditions of Spain but with some Native American andAfro-Caribbean influences.
The Roman Catholic cultural pattern of Spain, with emphasis on the family and the church, has evolved into a national style of life.
Festivals inhonor of patron saints are a colorful part of village and town life.
The guitar, accordion, and mandolin have traditionally been the most popular musical instruments, andthe country’s music primarily reflects a Spanish heritage.
Afro-Caribbean influences are also present, and salsa dance music remains popular.
Traces of Native Americanculture survive in designs used in jewelry, leather goods, and clothing.
The national sport is soccer.
Costa Rica has vibrant communities of artists, writers, actors, and musicians.
Theater performances are well-attended in Costa Rica, and the National Theater in SanJose is one of the city’s most impressive buildings.
Both local and touring drama companies perform here.
The building also serves as an opera house and concert hall.
IV ECONOMY
The economy of Costa Rica remained agricultural through most of the 20th century, until manufacturing overtook agriculture in the 1990s in economic importance.
Mostof the country’s economic activity takes place on the central plateau.
Overall living conditions in Costa Rica are high by Latin American standards, and the country has alarge middle class.
In 2002 the country’s gross domestic product (GDP) was $16.8 billion, or $4,270 per person.
GDP is a measure of the value of all goods and services a countryproduces.
In 2006 annual budget figures showed revenues of $5.4 billion and expenditures of $4.9 billion.
Controlling the national debt remains a problem for thegovernment.
A Agriculture
Some 10.3 percent of Costa Rica’s land area is under cultivation or used for plantation agriculture.
Apart from banana plantations, most of the agricultural landholdingsare small.
Coffee, traditionally one of the most valuable crops, is cultivated mainly in the central plateau.
However, coffee production has declined since the mid-1990s.In 2006, 131,949 metric tons of coffee was produced.
Bananas, the country’s main crop, are raised in the tropical coastal regions on plantations.
In the late 19th and early 20th century a United States firm, the United FruitCompany (now United Brands), opened the largest banana plantation in the world on the Pacific coast of Costa Rica and constructed the ports of Quepos and Golfito asbanana-shipping points.
A decline in coffee prices in the 1990s led the government to encourage farmers to grow other crops for export.
Today, sugarcane and pineapples and other tropicalfruit provide export earnings.
Corn, rice, vegetables, tobacco, and cotton are cultivated throughout the country, generally for domestic consumption.
Cattle are raisedfor meat and dairy products, and hogs are also raised for meat.
B Mining and Manufacturing
Gold and silver are mined in the western part of Costa Rica.
Deposits of manganese, nickel, mercury, and sulfur are largely unworked.
Petroleum deposits have beenfound in the south, but the government has chosen not to exploit these deposits in order to preserve the environment.
Salt is produced from seawater.
Manufacturing has grown in importance to Costa Rica’s economy since the 1960s.
Traditionally, manufacturing was largely confined to small-scale enterprises such ascoffee-drying plants, sawmills, woodworking factories, breweries, and distilleries and small factories that produced textiles, food products, furniture, cigarettes, andother consumer goods.
In the 1960s and 1970s larger factories in the country began to produce petroleum products, chemicals, pharmaceuticals, and plastics.
From the1980s on, foreign-owned firms opened factories in Costa Rica for assembling electronic products and clothing for export.
Medical equipment companies andpharmaceutical companies also opened plants in Costa Rica..
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