Kuwait (country) - country.
Publié le 04/05/2013
Extrait du document
«
Oil revenues have allowed Kuwait to build an extensive educational system, yielding a literacy rate of 84 percent.
Public school is free and compulsory from the age of 6to 13, and several private schools also teach this age group.
Kuwait University (founded in 1966) is also free and offers programs in a wide range of professional andscientific fields at several campuses.
Both the extensive library system at Kuwait University and the collection at Kuwait National Museum (1957) were heavily damagedand looted during the Iraqi occupation in the 1991 Persian Gulf War.
D Society
Kuwait offers free medical care to all residents, including citizens of other countries.
The government also provides several other benefits, including housing subsidies,without levying taxes.
As a result, many Kuwaitis depend on the government for support, but poverty, unemployment, and crime are low by global standards.
However,affluence and rapid change have brought their own difficulties.
By hiring many foreign workers, Kuwaitis have made themselves a minority in their own country.Relations between Kuwaitis and immigrants are sometimes strained, and foreigners often complain of unfair treatment in the workplace.
Obtaining Kuwaiti citizenship isextremely difficult, further widening the gulf between the two groups.
Among Kuwaitis, the rapid expansion of educational opportunities, wealth, and foreign travel hasled many older people to feel estranged from the younger generation.
Kuwaitis tend to have strong attachments to their families.
A house is designed to show little to the outside world, and often has a nearby structure, called a diwaniyya, for receiving guests.
Men spend much of their evenings in the diwaniyyas with friends and associates while women are usually inside the house.
In large part becausecultural life is centered around home and diwaniyya, there are few theaters or other places of public entertainment.
Most Kuwaiti men wear a modified form of traditional gown called the dishdasha along with Arab headdress.
Kuwaiti women wear a wide variety of clothing, from jeans to loosely fitting gowns and head coverings.
Foreigners tend to dress the way they would in their home countries, although more revealing clothing, such as shorts, isfrowned upon.
Thanks to the large immigrant population, many types of food are available in Kuwait, especially Lebanese and Indian food.
In accordance with Islamicteaching, alcohol and pork products are banned.
Team sports, especially soccer, are popular in Kuwait.
Many Kuwaitis also enjoy maritime sports such as sailing,yachting, and fishing.
IV ECONOMY
Kuwait is one of the world’s richest countries per capita.
Its initial prosperity was founded almost completely on oil reserves, which, at an estimated 102 billion barrels(2007), is roughly 8 percent of the world’s total.
Over time, however, Kuwait used oil earnings to make large investments abroad.
By 1990 the country earned morefrom foreign investment than from oil exports.
The expenses of the Iraqi invasion and postwar reconstruction placed a heavy economic burden on the country, but bythe mid-1990s Kuwait had resumed its preinvasion prosperity.
Gross domestic product (GDP) for 2005 was $80.8 billion, giving Kuwait a per capita GDP of $31,860.60.The labor force totals 1,426,421 people, only about one-quarter of whom are Kuwaiti citizens.
A Oil Industry
Because the government owns the oil industry, it controls most of the economy—in all, about 75 percent of the GDP.
Kuwait’s oil exports vary depending on internalneeds (almost all of Kuwait’s energy is derived from oil), international demand and prices, and production quotas fixed by the Organization of Petroleum ExportingCountries (OPEC), of which Kuwait is a member.
OPEC’s quotas, however, are difficult to enforce, and Kuwait and other countries have been accused of violating them.In 2004 oil production was 795 million barrels.
B Foreign Trade
While efforts have been made to encourage local agriculture and industry, Kuwait imports most products, including a wide range of food and manufactured goods.Imports totaled $7.9 billion in 2001, while exports amounted to $16.2 billion.
Leading purchasers of Kuwait’s exports are Japan, South Korea, the United States, andSingapore; chief sources for imports are the United States, Germany, Japan, and the United Kingdom.
C Currency
The Central Bank of Kuwait in the capital city issues Kuwait’s currency, the Kuwaiti dinar. The dinar is valued at 0.30 dinars per U.S.$1 (2006 average).
D Transportation
Kuwait’s transportation system is modern and efficient, with a road system that is well developed by regional standards.
Roads total 5,749 km (3,572 mi), of which 85percent are paved, and most people travel by automobile.
A small public bus system serves mainly foreign workers.
An international airport is located on the southernoutskirts of the Kuwait city metropolitan area and Kuwait Airways is the national airline.
The country has three modern seaports, one of which specializes in oil exports.
E Communication
Kuwait has a lively press with several independently owned daily newspapers that publish in Arabic and English.
Formal press censorship ended in 1992, and todaynewspapers argue vigorously about most public issues.
However, certain subjects (such as the emir) are considered beyond public criticism.
Television, radio, and theKuwaiti News Agency (KUNA) remain under government control and are less spirited.
V GOVERNMENT
Kuwait is a constitutional monarchy.
It is governed by its 1962 constitution, which established a National Assembly that shares power with an emir.
The emir suspendedthe constitution and parliament from 1976 to 1980 and again from 1986 to 1992, both times for loosely specified reasons.
Although the emir and his family dominatethe political system, there are significant elements of a parliamentary democracy.
When the emir attempted to create a purely consultative national council in 1990 toreplace the parliament, the opposition boycotted elections.
Before the issue could be resolved, Iraq invaded.
In return for unity during the invasion, the emir agreed torestore the constitution and parliament.
Native Kuwaiti citizens who are at least 21 years old have the right to vote and run for political office.
Naturalized citizens are required to have lived in Kuwait for acertain period of time before they can vote or run for office.
Police and military personnel are not allowed to vote.
A Executive.
»
↓↓↓ APERÇU DU DOCUMENT ↓↓↓
Liens utiles
- LA MUSIQUE COUNTRY
- Country- und Western-Musik - Musik.
- Pays noir, en anglais Black Country, terme imagé désignant les régions industrielles fondées sur l'extraction du charbon depuis l'époque de la révolution industrielle.
- Kuwait - geographie.
- Nelson Mandela's Inaugural Address Nobel Peace Prize winner and former political prisoner, Nelson Mandela, was elected president of the Republic of South Africa in April 1994 in the country's first multiracial elections.