Tanzania - country.
Publié le 04/05/2013
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The population of Tanzania (2008 estimate) is 40,213,162, giving the country an overall population density of 45 persons per sq km (118 per sq mi).
Yet the populationdistribution is irregular, with high densities found near fertile soils around Kilimanjaro and the shores of Lake Malawi, and comparatively low density throughout much ofthe interior of the country.
In the late 1960s and 1970s the Tanzanian government resettled most of the rural population in collective farming villages as part of itssocialist agenda.
The country’s population growth rate is 2.07 percent (2008).
The largest city, Dar es Salaam, has a population (2002) of 2,497,940.
Other major cities are Mwanza (population, 1988; 233,013), a port on Lake Victoria, and Tanga(187,634), an industrial center and seaport.
Zanzibar (157,634) is the largest city on the island.
Dodoma (155,000) has been designated as the eventual capital ofTanzania.
B Education
Primary education is free and compulsory in Tanzania, but not enough schools are available to accommodate all of the children, and only 84 percent of primary school-aged children are enrolled.
It is estimated that 80 percent of people over the age of 15 are literate.
Institutions of higher education in Tanzania include the University ofDar es Salaam (1961); the Open University of Tanzania (1992), also in Dar es Salaam; and Sokoine University of Agriculture (1984), in Morogoro.
C Culture
Tanzanian culture is a product of African, Arab, European, and Indian influences.
Traditional African values are being consciously adapted to modern life.
The country’s main libraries are located in Dar es Salaam, including the library of the University of Dar es Salaam, the National Archives, and the British Council Library.A lending service at the Dar es Salaam Technical College (1956) also circulates books by mail throughout the country.
Zanzibar has several community and schoollibraries in addition to the Museum Library and the Zanzibar National Archives.
The National Museum of Tanzania is located at Dar es Salaam.
The Zanzibar GovernmentMuseum is located in the city of Zanzibar.
IV ECONOMY
The economy of Tanzania is primarily agricultural.
Some 82 percent of the economically active population is engaged in farming, forestry, or fishing, and agriculturalproducts account for a significant share of annual exports.
The country is one of the world’s largest producers of sisal and cloves.
With an estimated per capita income of $324 a year, Tanzania is one of the poorest countries in the world.
From the late 1960s through the 1970s the governmentpursued a form of “African socialism,” aimed at reviving and modernizing precolonial African social and economic structures.
The government nationalized most banksand industries in 1967.
In the mid-1980s, after a decade of economic decline, Tanzania began moving away from socialist policies and adopted an economic recoveryprogram.
Agricultural production increased, as did financial support from donor nations.
Since the mid-1990s the government has privatized many industries and banks,and has adopted financial restraints recommended by the International Monetary Fund (IMF).
The estimated national budget in 1996 included $733 million in revenuesand $768 million in expenditures.
A Agriculture
Much of the world production of cloves comes from Zanzibar and Pemba islands, and cloves are the islands’ principal export.
For the country as a whole, chief exportedcrops are cashews, tobacco, and coffee.
Cotton, tea, and sisal are also exported.
The principal food crops for domestic consumption include corn, cassava, sorghum,rice, millet, sweet potatoes, and plantains.
The livestock population includes cattle, goats, sheep, and poultry.
B Forestry and Fishing
Timber production in Tanzania in 2006 totaled 24.2 million cu m (856 million cu ft), nearly all of which was used as fuel.
Timber includes camphor, podo, and Africanmahogany.
Fish and fish products are important Tanzanian exports.
The fish catch in 2005 was 354,351 metric tons, most of which was caught in inland waters,especially Lake Victoria.
Sardines and tuna are caught in the Indian Ocean.
C Mining
Tanzania is rich in minerals and its mining sector is expanding.
Diamonds, the top mineral export for decades, were surpassed in importance by gold in the late 1990s.Gold is by far Tanzania’s top export earner.
Many other precious gemstones are found in Tanzania, including rubies, sapphires, and tanzanite, which is found nowhereelse in the world.
Coal, limestone, tin, salt, lead, iron ore, and tungsten are also mined in the country.
D Manufacturing and Energy
Most manufacturing in Tanzania involves the processing of raw agricultural materials into products such as beer, sugar, cigarettes, and sisal twine.
The government hasalso encouraged non-agricultural manufacturing, and Tanzania exports cement, textiles, metal products, and other goods to neighboring countries.
Some 91 percent ofTanzania’s electricity is produced in hydroelectric plants; major facilities are on the Pangani and Great Ruaha rivers.
E Currency and Foreign Trade
The currency unit is the Tanzanian shilling (1,251.90 Tanzanian shillings equal U.S.$1; 2006 average).
Tanzania nationalized most banks in 1967, but the state-ownedBank of Tanzania (1966) began allowing privately owned banks to operate in the mid-1990s.
In 2003 the imports of Tanzania were valued at $2.2 billion, and exports totaled $1,218 million.
Gold, cashews, tobacco, coffee, cotton, tea, diamonds, cloves, and sisalmade up the bulk of exports.
Main imports were petroleum, machinery, transportation equipment, iron and steel and other metals, and food and live animals.
Principaltrading partners for exports are the United Kingdom, France, India, Japan, and Netherlands; chief partners for imports are South Africa, Japan, Australia, the UnitedKingdom, and the United Arab Emirates.
Tanzania is also a member of the five-nation East African Community (EAC) and its customs union, which means that Tanzaniaenjoys duty-free trading with the other member nations.
Considerable foreign exchange is also derived from tourists, some 622,000 of whom visited Tanzania in 2006.Most come to see Kilimanjaro and Serengeti National Park.
F Transportation and Communications.
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