The 1996 CIA World Factbook. United States. Central Intelligence Agency

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oil and gas field has been in decline for several years, but the November 1994 ratification of the $7.5 billion oil deal with a consortium of Western companies should generate the funds needed to spur future industrial development. Azerbaijan shares all the formidable problems of the ex-Soviet republics in making the transition from a command to a market economy, but its considerable energy resources brighten its long-term prospects. Baku has only recently begun making progress on economic reform, and old economic ties and structures have yet to be replaced. Whereas the economies of most of the former Soviet republics had begun to bottom out in 1995, Azerbaijan's economy continued to plummet because of its late start on economic reform.

      GDP: purchasing power parity - $11.5 billion (1995 estimate as extrapolated from World Bank estimate for 1994)

      GDP real growth rate: −17% (1995 est.)

      GDP per capita: $1,480 (1995 est.)

      GDP composition by sector: agriculture: NA% industry: NA% services: NA%

      Inflation rate (consumer prices): 85% (1995 est.)

      Labor force: 2.789 million

       by occupation: agriculture and forestry 32%, industry and

       construction 26%, other 42% (1990)

      Unemployment rate: 2.3% includes officially registered unemployed;

       also large numbers of unregistered unemployed and underemployed

       workers (December 1995)

      Budget:

       revenues: $465 million

       expenditures: $488 million, including capital expenditures of $NA

       (1995 est.)

      Industries: petroleum and natural gas, petroleum products, oilfield equipment; steel, iron ore, cement; chemicals and petrochemicals; textiles

      Industrial production growth rate: −21% (1995 est.)

      Electricity: capacity: 4,900,000 kW production: 17 billion kWh consumption per capita: 2,200 kWh (1995 est.)

      Agriculture: cotton, grain, rice, grapes, fruit, vegetables, tea, tobacco; cattle, pigs, sheep, goats

      Illicit drugs: illicit cultivator of cannabis and opium poppy, mostly for CIS consumption; limited government eradication program; transshipment point for illicit drugs to Western Europe

      Exports: $549.9 million (f.o.b., 1995)

       commodities: oil and gas, chemicals, oilfield equipment, textiles,

       cotton

       partners: mostly CIS and European countries

      Imports: $681.5 million (c.i.f., 1995)

       commodities: machinery and parts, consumer durables, foodstuffs,

       textiles

       partners: European countries

      External debt: $100 million (of which $75 million to Russia)

      Economic aid:

       recipient: ODA, $14 million (1993)

       note: commitments, 1992–95, $1,000 million ($185 million in

       disbursements); wheat from Turkey

      Currency: 1 manat = 100 gopik

      Exchange rates: manats per US$1 - 4,375 (April 1996), 4,500 (April 1995), 4,168 (end of December 1994)

      Fiscal year: calendar year

      Transportation———————

      Railways:

       total: 2,125 km in common carrier service; does not include

       industrial lines

       broad gauge: 2,125 km 1.520-m gauge (1,278 km electrified) (1993)

      Highways:

       total: 36,700 km

       paved: 31,800 km (includes graveled)

       unpaved: 4,900 km (1990 est.)

      Pipelines: crude oil 1,130 km; petroleum products 630 km; natural

       gas 1,240 km

      Ports: Baku (Baki)

      Airports:

       total: 69

       with paved runways over 3 047 m: 2

       with paved runways 2 438 to 3 047 m: 6

       with paved runways 1 524 to 2 437 m: 17

       with paved runways 914 to 1 523 m: 3

       with paved runways under 914 m: 1

       with unpaved runways 914 to 1 523 m: 7

       with unpaved runways under 914 m: 33 (1994 est.)

      Communications———————

      Telephones: 710,000 (1991 est.)

      Telephone system: 202,000 persons waiting for telephone installations (January 1991 est.) domestic: telephone service is of poor quality and inadequate; a joint venture to establish a cellular telephone system in the Baku area was supposed to become operational in 1994 international: cable and microwave radio relay connections to former Soviet republics; connection through Moscow international gateway switch to other countries; satellite earth stations - 1 Intelsat and 1 Intersputnik (Intelsat provides service to Turkey and through Turkey to 200 more countries; Intersputnik provides direct service to New York)

      Radio broadcast stations: AM NA, FM NA, shortwave NA (1 state-owned radio broadcast station)

      Radios: NA

      Television broadcast stations: 2 note: domestic and Russian TV programs are received locally and Turkish and Iranian TV is received from an Intelsat satellite through a receive-only earth station

      Televisions: NA

      Defense———

      Branches: Army, Navy, Air Force, Maritime Border Guard

      Manpower availability: males age 15–49: 1,952,390 males fit for military service: 1,574,813 males reach military age (18) annually: 68,006 (1996 est.)

      Defense expenditures: 33.5 billion manats, NA% of GDP (1994); note - conversion of defense expenditures into US dollars using the current exchange rate could produce misleading results

      ======================================================================

      @Bahrain———

      Map—

      Location: 26 00 N, 50 33 E—Middle East, archipelago in the

      

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