Zambia - country.
Publié le 04/05/2013
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The Livingstone Museum, at Livingstone, has a collection relating to the archaeology and natural history of southern Africa.
The Institute for African Studies of theUniversity of Zambia publishes studies relating to central Africa.
IV ECONOMY
The wealth of Zambia is based largely on mining in the rich copper belt, and downturns in copper prices have severely damaging economic consequences.
Someprocessing and manufacturing has been started since independence, and during the 1970s attempts were made to diversify agriculture and to make the country self-sufficient in food.
In 2006 the national budget showed $1,898 million in revenue and $2,143 million in expenditure.
A Labor
In 2006 some 5 million Zambians participated in the labor force.
The principal labor organization is the Zambia Congress of Trade Unions, which has about 400,000members.
Civil servants and miners also have unions.
B Agriculture
Some 70 percent of Zambia’s working population is engaged in agriculture, largely subsistence farming.
Principal crops and the amount produced in metric tons in 2006were corn, the staple grain (865,000); sugarcane (2.7 million); and cassava (1 million).
Sunflower seeds, peanuts, sweet potatoes, and tobacco are also grown.
Beefand dairy cattle are raised for domestic use.
The agricultural sector remains underdeveloped and vulnerable to weather fluctuations, and food shortages have occurred.
C Mining
The copper mines of Zambia are among the richest in the world.
Although world copper prices collapsed in 1975, damaging the Zambian economy, in the early 1990sthe country still received about half of its export earnings from copper.
Output in 2004 was 426,900 metric tons.
Zambia is also among the world’s largest producers ofcobalt.
Other minerals extracted were gold (150 kg/331 lb), silver (7 metric tons), and gem-quality emeralds.
A diamond field was discovered in 1992.
D Manufacturing
Manufacturing, mining, and construction employ only 7 percent of the labor force but account for 33 percent of the gross domestic product (GDP).
Principal activitieswere the smelting and refining of copper and other metals, vehicle assembly, petroleum refining, food processing, and the production of fertilizers, explosives, andtextiles.
E Currency and Banking
The decimal system of currency, issued in 1968, is based on the kwacha, consisting of 100 ngwee (3,603 kwachas equal U.S.$1; 2006 average).
The country’s central bank is the Bank of Zambia (1964); commercial, development, and foreign banks are widely represented.
F Foreign Trade
Imports—such as machinery and transport equipment, mineral fuels and lubricants, chemicals, food, and basic manufactured goods—totaled $1,253 million in 2002.Exports—chiefly copper and cobalt—totaled $930 million.
Principal partners for exports are Japan, Saudi Arabia, Thailand, Taiwan, India, Belgium and Luxembourg(which constitute a single trading entity), France, and Malaysia; principal partners for imports are South Africa, the United Kingdom, Zimbabwe, Japan, Saudi Arabia,and the United States.
G Transportation and Communications
Zambia has 1,273 km (791 mi) of railroads.
A railroad from Zimbabwe runs to Livingstone, Lusaka, and Ndola, connecting with the DRC system, and then to Benguelaon the Atlantic coast of Angola.
The Tanzania-Zambia Railroad (Tazara) connects Lusaka with the port of Dar es Salaam in Tanzania.
Some 91,440 km (56,818 mi) ofroads connect the towns of Zambia.
Lusaka is served by an international airport.
The government operates radio and television stations at Lusaka and Kitwe.
In 1999there were 149 radio receivers and 142 television sets in use for every 1,000 inhabitants.
V GOVERNMENT
Zambia is a republic with a president elected to a maximum of two five-year terms by direct universal suffrage.
The president appoints a cabinet, which is headed by aprime minister.
Zambia’s legislative body, the National Assembly, has 159 members: 150 popularly elected members, 8 members appointed by the president, and thespeaker of the house.
The 27-member House of Chiefs is an advisory body.
The United National Independence Party (UNIP) was Zambia’s sole legal political organization until 1990.
In 1991 the legislature enacted a new constitution providing fora multiparty system and limiting presidential powers.
An opposition group, the Movement for Multiparty Democracy (MMD), won the 1991 general elections.
Theconstitution was amended in 1996.
In 2001 the MMD emerged from general elections with less than half of the seats in the National Assembly, but remained the largestsingle party.
A Judiciary
The judicial system includes a supreme court, a high court, and lower courts on the British model.
African customary law is applied in special courts.
B Defense
In 2004 the armed forces of Zambia consisted of an army of 13,500 and an air force of 1,600.
Military service is voluntary.
VI HISTORY
Southward-migrating Bantu farmers and herders settled in the area that is now Zambia over a period of several centuries beginning around the 4th century AD.
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