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Background Note: Colombia
PROFILE
OFFICIAL NAME:
Republic of Colombia
Geography
Area: 1.14 million sq. km. (440,000 sq. mi.); about three times
the size of Montana; fourth-largest country in South America.
Cities: Capital--Bogota (pop. 2005 projected: 7.1
million). Other major cities include Medellin, Cali,
Barranquilla and Cartagena.
Terrain: Flat coastal areas, with extensive coastlines on the
Pacific Ocean and Caribbean Sea, three rugged parallel mountain
chains, central highlands and flat eastern grasslands.
Climate: Tropical on coast and eastern plains, cooler in
highlands.
People
Nationality: Noun and adjective--Colombian(s).
Population (2005 projected): 46 million.
Annual population growth: 1.8%.
Religion: Roman Catholic 90%.
Language: Spanish.
Education: Years compulsory--9. Attendance--80% of
children enter school. Only 5 years of primary school are
offered in many rural areas. Literacy--93% in urban
areas, 67% in rural areas.
Health: Infant mortality rate--25/1,000. Life
expectancy (2000-05 period)--men 69 yrs., women 75
yrs.
Ethnic groups: Mestizo (58%), white (20%), mulatto (14%), black
(4%), mixed black-Amerindian (3%) and Amerindian (1%).
Government
Type: Republic.
Independence: July 20, 1810.
Constitution: July 1991.
Branches: Executive--President (chief of state and head
of government). Legislative--Bicameral Congress.
Judicial--Supreme Court, Constitutional Court, Council of
State, Superior Judicial Council.
Administrative divisions: 32 departments; Bogota, capital
district.
Major political parties: Conservative Party of Colombia,
Liberal, National Unity, Radical Change, Alternative Democratic
Pole, and numerous small political movements.
Suffrage: Universal, age 18 and over.
Principal Government Officials
President--Alvaro URIBE Velez
Vice President--Francisco SANTOS Calderon
Minister of Foreign Affairs--Maria Consuelo ARAUJO
Minister of Defense--Juan Manuel SANTOS Calderon
Ambassador to the United States--Carolina BARCO Isakson
Ambassador to the Organization of American States--Camilo OSPINA
Bernal
Ambassador to the United Nations--Claudia BLUM de Barberi
Colombia maintains an embassy in the United
States at 2118 Leroy Place NW, Washington, DC 20008 (tel.
202-387-8338). Consulates are located in Atlanta, Boston,
Chicago, Houston, Los Angeles, Miami, New York, San Francisco,
San Juan and Washington D.C.
Economy
GDP (2005): $123.7 billion; base year 1994: $105.9 billion.
Annual growth rate (2005): 5.1%.
Per capita GDP (2005): $2,688.81
Government expenditures (2005): 22.7% of GDP.
Natural resources: Coal, petroleum, natural gas, iron ore,
nickel, gold, silver, copper, platinum, emeralds.
Manufacturing (14.4% of GDP): Types--textiles and
garments, chemicals, metal products, cement, cardboard
containers, plastic resins and manufactures, beverages, wood
products, pharmaceuticals, machinery, electrical equipment.
Agriculture (13.1% of GDP): Products--coffee, bananas,
cut flowers, cotton, sugarcane, livestock, rice, corn, tobacco,
potatoes, soybeans, sorghum. Cultivated land--8.2% of
total area.
Other sectors (by percentage of GDP): Financial services--17.1%;
commerce--11.2%; transportation and communications
services--7.9%; mining and quarrying--4.5%;
construction and public works--5.4%; government, personal
and other services--18.6; electricity, gas, and water--2.9%.
Trade: Exports (2005)--$21.1 billion: petroleum, coal,
coffee, flowers, textiles and garments, ferronickel, bananas,
chemicals, pharmaceuticals, gold, sugar, cardboard containers,
printed material, cement, plastic resins and manufactures,
emeralds. Major markets--U.S., Venezuela, Germany,
Netherlands, Japan. Imports (2005)--$21.2 billion:
machinery/equipment, grains, chemicals, transportation
equipment, mineral products, consumer products, metals/metal
products, plastic/rubber, paper products, aircraft, oil and gas
industry equipment, supplies. Major suppliers--U.S.,
Germany, Japan, Panama, Venezuela.
PEOPLE
Colombia is the third-most populous country in Latin America,
after Brazil and Mexico. Thirty cities have a population of
100,000 or more. The nine eastern lowlands departments,
constituting about 54% of Colombia's area, have less than 3% of
the population and a density of less than one person per square
kilometer (two persons per sq. mi.). Ethnic diversity in
Colombia is a result of the intermingling of indigenous peoples,
Europeans and Africans. Today, only about 1% of the people can
be identified as fully indigenous on the basis of language and
customs. |