Jamaica - country.
Publié le 04/05/2013
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majority, the Church of God, Baptists, Anglicans, Seventh-day Adventists, Pentecostalists, and Roman Catholics predominate.
Several well-established Jewish, Muslim,and Hindu communities exist.
A number of popular sects, such as Pocomania and Rastafarianism, are a significant and famous feature of the national religious life.
C Education
School attendance by children between the ages of 6 and 11 is nearly universal, and 84 percent of all 12- to 18-year-olds attend secondary institutions.
In 2000 theenrollment in primary schools was 328,500.
A major institution of higher learning for the entire Caribbean region is the University of the West Indies, Mona Campus (1948), located at Kingston.
Jamaica also has anumber of vocational and technical schools, teacher-training colleges, and a college of arts, science, and technology.
D Culture
The position of Jamaica as a dependency of Britain for more than 300 years is reflected in both language and customs.
However, Jamaica also has a rich tradition ofAfrica-derived popular culture.
This tradition appears strongly in music and dance.
Reggae, a distinct style of Jamaican music, much of it highly political, is popularthroughout the island.
This music and its well-known performers, especially the late singer Bob Marley, have achieved enormous international success.
Calypso and soca(soul-calypso) music, both also of Caribbean origin, are popular as well.
See also Caribbean Literature.
IV ECONOMY
Since its independence in 1962, Jamaica has worked to diversify its economy.
Traditionally agricultural, the economy now includes strong mining, manufacturing, andtourism sectors.
In the early 2000s, however, the Jamaican economy became stagnant due to the effects of a worldwide economic slowdown, especially in the UnitedStates.
Jamaica also suffers from high unemployment.
Annual budget figures for 2006 showed about $3.93 billion in revenues and $3.88 billion in expenditures.
In 2006 Jamaica’s gross domestic product (GDP) was $10.02billion, or about $3,757.90 per capita.
These GDP numbers are substantial underestimates because they do not include the illegal drug trade, including the productionand sale of marijuana and the transport of cocaine grown in South America to other regions.
Marijuana, or ganja as the islanders call it, brings in hundreds of millions of dollars each year.
A Tourism
Tourism is vital to the Jamaican economy and provides a large portion of foreign-exchange earnings.
In 2006, 1.7 million people visited the island, contributing $1.9billion to the economy.
The peak tourist season in Jamaica is December through April.
B Agriculture
Some 18 percent of the total Jamaican labor force is engaged in agricultural production.
The chief crop is sugarcane; the harvest in 2006 was 1.9 million metric tons.Other leading agricultural products are bananas, citrus fruits, tobacco, cacao, coffee, coconuts, corn, sweet potatoes, hay, peppers, ginger, mangoes, potatoes, andarrowroot.
Jamaica grows nearly the entire world supply of allspice.
In 2006 the livestock population included 430,000 cattle, 440,000 goats, and 85,000 pigs.
C Mining and Manufacturing
The bauxite and alumina (enriched bauxite ore) industries are a mainstay of the Jamaican economy.
In 2004 annual production of bauxite amounted to 13.3 millionmetric tons.
Beginning in the 1950s manufacturing became an increasingly important part of the Jamaican economy.
Although it declined in the 1990s, it still accounts for 13 percentof gross domestic product.
The government has granted concessions, such as duty-free importation and tax-relief programs, to further industrialization.
Along withestablished food and beverage industries, the country manufactures products such as printed fabrics, clothing, footwear, paints, agricultural machinery, cement,transistor radios, and fertilizers.
A petroleum refinery in Kingston produces fuel sufficient to meet about half the national demand.
D Banking and Foreign Trade
The unit of currency is the Jamaican dollar, consisting of 100 cents (65.70 dollars equal U.S.$1; 2006 average).
The Bank of Jamaica, established in 1960, is the centralbank and bank of issue.
Several commercial banks are also in operation.
Among the chief exports are alumina, bauxite, sugar, rum, clothing, and coffee, and all exports were valued at $1.1 billion in 2002.
Leading purchasers are the UnitedStates, the United Kingdom, Canada, Norway, and Japan.
Food and animal products, chemicals, textiles, machinery, and petroleum are major imports; the value of allimports amounted to $3.5 billion.
Chief sources are the United States, Trinidad and Tobago, the United Kingdom, Japan, Venezuela, and Canada.
E Transportation and Communications
In 2004 Jamaica had 20,996 km (13,046 mi) of roads; of these, about one-fourth were paved.
Most of the railways in Jamaica are privately owned and used totransport bauxite.
Numerous international airlines and Air Jamaica serve the island, and internal flights are provided by Trans-Jamaican Airlines.
Jamaica has two broadcasting companies, one public and one privately owned.
In 1998 the country had 766 radio receivers and 187television sets for every 1,000residents.
In 2005 there were 129 telephone mainlines per 1,000 people.
F Labor
In 2006 the employed labor force exceeded 1.2 million.
However, Jamaica suffers from high unemployment; in 2004 the country’s unemployment rate was 11.4percent.
Many people are employed in seasonal work such as those who work on sugar plantations or in tourist facilities.
The main trade unions included the National Workers’ Union of Jamaica (NWU) and the Bustamante Industrial Trade Union (BITU).
Each union was closely identified withone of the two main political parties: the NWU with the People’s National Party and the BITU with the Jamaica Labour Party..
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