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Background Note: Macedonia
PROFILE
OFFICIAL NAME:
Republic of
Macedonia
Geography
Area: 25,713 square km. (slightly larger than Vermont).
Cities (2001 est.): Capital--Skopje 600,000; Tetovo,
Kumanovo, Gostivar and Bitola 100,000+.
Geography: Situated in the southern region of the Balkan
Peninsula, Macedonia is landlocked and mountainous.
Climate: Three climatic types overlap--Mediterranean; moderately
continental; and mountainous, producing hot, dry summers and
cold, snowy winters.
People
Population (2006 est.): 2,042,894.
Growth rate (2006 est.): 0.2%.
Ethnic groups (2002): Macedonian 64.18%, Albanian 25.17%,
Turkish 3.85%, Roma 2.66%, Serb 1.78%.
Religions: Eastern Orthodox 65%, Muslim 29%, Catholic 4% and
others 2%.
Languages: Macedonian 70%, Albanian 21%, Turkish 3%,
Serbo-Croatian 3%, and others 3%.
Education: Years compulsory--8. Literacy--94.6%.
Health (2006 est.): Infant mortality rate--11.1
deaths/per 1,000 live births. Life expectancy--males
71.79 years; females 76.43 years.
Labor force (2006): 903,576; employed 578,810: services--37.5%;
industry and commerce--44.9%; agriculture--17.6%.
Government
Type: Parliamentary democracy.
Constitution: Adopted November 17, 1991; effective November 20,
1991. Amended January 6, 1992.
Independence: September 8, 1991 (from Yugoslavia).
Branches: Executive--prime minister (head of government),
council of ministers (cabinet), president (head of state).
Legislative--unicameral parliament or Sobranie (120 members
elected by popular vote to 4-year terms from party lists based
on the percentage parties gain of the overall vote in each of
six election units). Judicial--Supreme Court, State
Judicial Council, Constitutional Court, Public Prosecutor's
Office, Public Attorney. Legal system is based on civil law;
judicial review of legislative acts.
Subdivisions: 84 opstini (municipalities) plus the city of
Skopje.
Suffrage: Universal at age 18.
Main political parties: Internal Macedonian Revolutionary
Organization-Democratic Party for Macedonian National Unity (VMRO-DPMNE);
Social-Democratic Union of Macedonia (SDSM); Democratic Union
for Integration (DUI); Democratic Party of Albanians (DPA); New
Social Democratic Party (NSDP); Internal Macedonian
Revolutionary Organization-People’s Party (VMRO-NP); Party for
Democratic Prosperity (PDP); Democratic Renewal of Macedonia
(DOM); National Democratic Party (NDP); Liberal-Democratic Party
(LDP); Socialist Party of Macedonia (SPM); Liberal Party (LP);
Democratic Alternative (DA); Democratic Union (DU); Democratic
Party of the Turks in Macedonia (DPTM); Democratic League of
Bosniaks; Democratic Party of Serbs in Macedonia, United Party
of Romas in Macedonia; Democratic Union of Vlachs from
Macedonia; Labor-Agricultural Party of Macedonia,
Socialist-Christian Party of Macedonia.
Economy
GDP (2006 est.): $6.215 billion.
Per capita GDP (2006 est.): $3,042.
Real GDP growth (2006 est.): 3.1%.
Annualized inflation rate (2006): 3.2%.
Unemployment rate (2006): 36.0%.
Trade: Significant exports--steel, textile products,
chromium, lead, zinc, nickel, tobacco, lamb, and wine.
Official exchange rate (2005 avg.): 49.3 Macedonian denars =
U.S.$1; (2006 avg.): 48.8 Macedonian denars = U.S.$1.
GEOGRAPHY
Macedonia is located in the heart of south central Europe. It
shares a border with Greece to the south, Bulgaria to the east,
Serbia (and Kosovo) to the north, and Albania to the west. The
country is 80% mountainous, rising to its highest point at Mt.
Korab (peak 2,764 m).
PEOPLE
Since the end of the Second World War, Macedonia's population
has grown steadily, with the greatest increases occurring in the
ethnic Albanian community. From 1953 through the time of the
latest official census in 2002 (initial official results were
released December 2003), the percentage of ethnic Albanians
living in Macedonia rose threefold. The western part of the
country, where most ethnic Albanians live, is the most heavily
populated, with approximately 40% of the total population. As in
many countries, people have moved into the cities in search of
employment. Macedonia has also experienced sustained high rates
of permanent or seasonal emigration. |