Georgia (country) - country.
Publié le 04/05/2013
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1917.
During the subsequent Soviet period, religious practice was strongly discouraged because the Soviet state was officially atheistic; however, the GeorgianOrthodox Church was allowed to function openly.
Orthodox Christianity is the religion of about 58 percent of the Georgian population.
Muslims represent about 19 percent of the country’s population, with ethnicAzerbaijanis, Kurds, and Ajars comprising the principal Muslim groups.
Ajars are ethnic Georgians who converted to Islam in the 17th century; they reside primarily inthe autonomous republic of Ajaria.
Judaism is also practiced, although to a lesser extent.
Georgia has an adult literacy rate of 99.5 percent, a result of the Soviet emphasis on free and universal education.
Georgians were among the most highly educated ofall the nationalities in the former USSR.
Since independence, however, all levels of education in Georgia have been seriously underfunded, resulting in lower educationalstandards.
Most schools are state operated and provide tuition-free education; however, a number of private schools have opened since the early 1990s.
Education iscompulsory from the first through eleventh grades, and most students enter the school system at age six.
Institutions of higher education in Georgia include theUniversity of Tbilisi and Georgian Technical University, both located in Tbilisi.
Abkhazia has its own university, Abkhazian State University.
Despite centuries of foreign domination, Georgia has maintained a distinct culture, one influenced by both Asian and European traditions.
The Georgian language is oneindication of this cultural individuality.
Georgia’s ancient culture is evident in the republic’s architecture, which is renowned for the role it played in the development ofthe Byzantine style.
The republic also has a long tradition of highly skilled metalwork, with excavations of ancient tombs revealing finely wrought pieces in bronze, gold,and silver.
Although a Georgian literary tradition dates from the 5th century, the 12th and 13th centuries are considered the golden age of Georgian literary development.
Thenational epic of Georgia, Vepkhis-tqaosani (The Man in the Tiger’s Skin), was written during this period by poet Shotha Rusthaveli ( see Georgian Literature).
Western European cultural movements, especially romanticism, began to influence Georgian writers and artists during the 19th century.
Many Georgian writers produced worksof high quality in the late 1800s and early 1900s.
Beginning in the 1920s, however, the Soviet regime required artistic works to glorify socialist ideals ( see Socialist Realism).
Georgian writers and artists were censored and in some cases executed for noncompliance.
During the Soviet period, Georgian author KonstantinGamsakhurdia won acclaim for his historical novels.
The State Literary Museum of Georgia, located in Tbilisi, contains a thorough history of Georgian literature from the 19th and 20th centuries.
The State Museum ofGeorgia, which contains archaeological exhibits, and the Georgian State Art Museum also are located in Tbilisi.
IV ECONOMY OF GEORGIA
The breakup of the Soviet Union severely dislocated the economy of Georgia by disrupting established trade patterns.
Three separate armed conflicts and several yearsof political instability created even more serious damage.
The country’s gross domestic product (GDP), which measures the total value of goods and services produced,declined between 1990 and 1995 by the greatest amount of any former Soviet republic.
Georgia became increasingly dependent upon foreign financial andhumanitarian aid.
But beginning in the mid-1990s, increasing political stability allowed Georgia to make significant progress toward renewing economic growth.
Several attributes brighten Georgia’s long-term economic prospects.
The country’s warm climate and position on the eastern shore of the Black Sea make the countrysuitable for agricultural and tourism development.
It also straddles the best transportation routes across the Caucasus Mountains.
Abundant rivers flowing from themountains provide water for crop irrigation and hydroelectric production.
The private sector was active in Georgia even before the end of the Soviet era, with a thriving black market in which everything from bread to cars was bought andbartered illegally.
The government adopted a privatization law shortly after independence but delayed its full implementation until the return of political stability in themid-1990s.
While intending to transform state-managed enterprises into profitable companies, the government retains a share of most operations.
Georgia’s GDP in 2006 was $7.74 billion.
Agriculture, including forestry and fishing, contributed 13 percent of the total.
Industry, including manufacturing, mining, andconstruction, produced 25 percent of GDP.
Services, which include trade and financial activities, accounted for 62 percent.
However, a large portion of the Georgianeconomy is in the so-called informal sector and outside of usual economic reporting.
Agriculture is an important feature of the Georgian economy, and the country has one of the most diverse agricultural sectors of any of the former Soviet republics.
Thelowlands of the west have a subtropical climate and produce tea and citrus fruits, while grapes and deciduous fruits grow in the uplands.
The country’s long growingseason allows it to grow almost any crop, and Georgia also produces large amounts of vegetables and grains.
Draining of swampy coastal lowlands around the mouth ofthe Rioni River added much fertile land.
Livestock raising is also important; milk from cows and goats is used to make cheese.
The agricultural sector provides 54percent of employment.
The processing of agricultural goods is the most significant part of Georgia’s industrial activity.
The country also gained importance as an industrial region because of theabundance of mineral deposits (manganese, iron ore, molybdenum, and gold) and fuel (coal and petroleum).
The industrial sector provided 9 percent of employment in2005.
During the Soviet period the Georgian Black Sea coast was a favorite vacation area for residents of the Soviet bloc.
Visitation to the resorts nearly ceased in the early1990s with the outbreak of armed conflict and economic disintegration.
With the return of political stability, the region regained its potential as a tourist destination.
Energy shortages hampered the Georgian economy beginning in 1993, when prices for imported fuels from Russia and other suppliers increased.
The government ofGeorgia rationed household electricity and heating fuel during winters, power outages were frequent and long lasting, and many industries were closed due to fuelshortages.
Energy shortages were subsequently eased through the development of the country’s capacity for hydroelectric power.
In 2003 hydroelectricity accountedfor 83 percent of the country’s total power generation.
Meanwhile, Georgia’s improving economy increased its ability to pay for fuel imports.
In addition, Georgia leveraged its strategic location to bargain for its interests inthe construction of new oil and natural gas pipelines through its territory.
The first of these, a petroleum pipeline from Baku, Azerbaijan, to Supsa on Georgia’s BlackSea coast, opened in 1999.
Two additional pipelines, transporting both petroleum and natural gas from the Caspian fields of Azerbaijan through Georgia to Turkey,commenced operations in 2005 and 2006.
Georgia receives a portion of the transported fuel as a transit fee.
During the Soviet period nearly all of Georgia’s trade was with other republics of the former Soviet Union.
Following independence Georgia worked to establish newtrading relationships.
Turkey became its principal trading partner, accounting for more than a quarter of total trade.
Leading exports are metal products, coffee, tea,and beverages; chief imports are energy and food products.
Aided by the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the government reduced inflation from 62 percent per month in 1994 to less than 1 percent per month in 1997.
InSeptember 1995 the Georgian government introduced a new currency, the lari, in an attempt to stabilize the economy and improve living conditions (1.80 lari equal U.S.$1; 2006).
The lari replaced the Georgian coupon, a provisional currency that had declined dramatically in value since being issued in July 1993..
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