Guyana - country.
Publié le 04/05/2013
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European patterns of living.
People of mixed African and European ancestry form a distinct group in Guyana, maintaining closer social ties to the European communitythan to the African Guyanese community.
Asians from the Indian subcontinent began to arrive in the 19th century, following the abolition of slavery in Guyana, to work as indentured and contract laborers.
Theycontinued to arrive until 1917, when Britain outlawed indentured servitude.
Thousands of Indians chose to remain in Guyana after their terms of employment ended.Many live in the rural districts as plantation workers and rice farmers, although some have moved to urban areas.
A small but highly influential community of Indianbusiness and professional people live in Georgetown.
The Indians have tended to preserve their cultural identity and have maintained a deep interest in their homeland.
Guyana’s Portuguese inhabitants are the descendants of indentured laborers brought mainly from the island of Madeira in the 19th century.
They did not work asagricultural laborers for long; many became urban shopkeepers and merchants.
Guyanese of Portuguese descent have not preserved their native language.
Indenturedlaborers also came to Guyana from China in the 19th century.
Many Guyanese of Chinese ancestry now own shops.
The few British inhabitants of Guyana are generallyemployed by the sugar firms or by the government.
Guyana’s various ethnic groups form distinct communities within the nation.
This division extends into politics, where major political parties are often identified withspecific ethnic groups.
Despite the political importance of ethnic identifications, a common Guyanese culture has developed.
The bulk of the people are descendents ofplantation workers and have had little contact with their ancestral homelands.
There is also widespread belief that racial or ethnic origin should be unimportant in publiclife.
There is broad tolerance of religious diversity.
Many Indians, for example, accept baptism and membership in Christian churches without abandoning theirparticipation in Hindu rituals.
A Education
In the 1998–1999 school year 107,200 pupils were enrolled in 422 elementary schools in Guyana.
Secondary, technical, and teacher-training institutions had a total of66,500 students.
The country’s principal institution of higher education is the University of Guyana, founded in 1963 in Georgetown.
Education is valued as a means ofsocial mobility.
In 2005 Guyana had a literacy rate of 99 percent, one of the highest in Latin America.
B Culture
Until its independence, Guyana was tied culturally more closely to Suriname and French Guiana than to the rest of South America.
Guyana was settled by East Indians,who still speak Urdu, Hindi, and Tamil dialects; black Africans; and a few Europeans, mostly from Britain.
These various ethnic strains have remained fairly distinct, andtoday each group has its own style of life and culture, although the ties of nationhood tend to bind them together.
IV ECONOMY
Immediately before independence in 1966, Guyana was in the early stages of developing its resources.
The development continued under an economic plan drawn upby British, United States, and Canadian experts.
Manufacturing, which was on a small scale in the late 1960s, was expanded in the 1970s, but in the early 2000s theeconomy of Guyana was dominated by agriculture, mining, and service industries.
The country had a gross domestic product (GDP) of $896 million in 2006.
The nationalbudget in 1996 included revenue of $247 million and expenditure of $287 million.
A Agriculture
Agriculture accounts for 31 percent of GDP and employs 28 percent of the labor force.
Sugar, its by-products, and rice account for most of the agricultural exports; 3million metric tons of sugarcane and 273,328 metric tons of rice were produced in 2006.
Cultivation of sugarcane and rice is confined primarily to the narrow coastalstrip of rich, alluvial soil.
Coconuts, coffee, cacao, citrus fruits, corn, manioc, and other tropical fruits and vegetables are grown primarily for home consumption.
Largeareas of rough pasture exist in the interior savanna.
Substantial numbers of cattle, hogs, sheep, and chickens are raised.
B Forestry and Fishing
In 2006 the timber harvest from Guyana’s extensive forests was 1,433,952 cubic meters (50.6 million cubic feet).
Almost all of the harvest was made up of hardwoods,used mainly in construction and furniture-making.
Timber has become an important export, and the government sought foreign investors to expand its forestryindustry.
Fishing in Guyana is concentrated along the Atlantic coast.
The industry expanded during the 1990s and early 2000s, with shrimp becoming a valuable export.
Thecatch in 2005 was 53,980 metric tons.
C Mining
Guyana is a major producer of bauxite; 1.5 million metric tons were mined in 2004.
Guyana also produces gold and diamonds.
D Manufacturing and Energy
Manufacturing in Guyana largely involves the processing of minerals, especially bauxite, and of agricultural and forest products, including sugar, rice, rum, and timberfor export.
Factories also produce foodstuffs, beverages, construction materials, clothing, soap, and cigarettes for local use.
In 2003 Guyana generated 779 million kilowatt-hours of electricity, 99 percent of which was produced in thermal facilities.
The country has a great potential forproducing hydroelectricity.
E Tourism
With its vast, untouched rain forests, Guyana has great tourism potential.
The government has begun to target the tourist sector for development, especiallyecotourism, but tourism has so far not contributed greatly to Guyana’s economy.
Reports of violence in Georgetown during the early 2000s deterred potential touristsfrom visiting the country.
F Currency and Foreign Trade.
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