Syria - country.
Publié le 04/05/2013
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D Education
Primary education is free and compulsory for all children aged 6 through 12.
Some 78 percent of the adult Syrian population was estimated to be literate in 2005.Primary schools enrolled 2.8 million pupils in the 2000 school year, and 1.1 million students attended secondary schools and vocational institutes.
In 1998, 94,110 Syrian students were enrolled in institutes of higher education.
Syria has universities in Damascus, Ḩalab, Ḩim ş, and Al L ādhiq īyah.
Also in Damascus isthe Arabic Languages Academy (1919), which is devoted to the study of Arabic language, literature, history, and culture.
Other institutes and colleges specialize in socialwork, agriculture, industry, technology, and music.
E Libraries and Museums
The public libraries in Ḩalab, Damascus, Ḩim ş, and Al L ādhiq īyah house the principal collections of the country.
Other major repositories include the Damascus UniversityLibrary and the Assad National Library, also in Damascus.
The most notable museum is the National Museum (1919), in Damascus, which has collections that includeAsian, Greek, Roman, Byzantine, and Islamic art.
The museums at the site of the ancient city of Palmyra and in Ḩalab are noted for their archaeological holdings.
IV ECONOMY
Syria’s economy depends heavily on its agricultural production.
The country has 4.9 million hectares (12 million acres) of cultivated land, accounting for 27 percent of itstotal land area.
About one-fifth of the tilled acreage is irrigated, but extensive areas lie unused for lack of water.
Irrigation is necessary even in many regions thatreceive substantial annual rainfall, because most of the rainfall occurs during the winter rather than during the growing season.
Much of the acreage under cultivationsuffers from soil exhaustion because of insufficient use of fertilizers and failure to rotate crops.
The estimated national budget in 1999 included $17.5 billion in domesticrevenue and $17.5 billion in expenditure.
Syria is heavily dependent on aid from the major Arab oil-producing states.
A Agriculture
Despite climatic handicaps, Syria produces a wide variety of crops, some in sufficient quantity for export.
The major crops are cereals, primarily wheat and barley.
Otherimportant crops include sugar beets, grapes, olives, citrus fruits, vegetables, and cotton.
Cotton accounted for more than half the national export revenues before theascendancy of oil in the mid-1970s.
Syrian farmers also raise sheep, chickens, goats, and cattle.
B Mining
Oil was first discovered in Syria in the 1950s.
Significant output began after the 1968 completion of a pipeline linking the oil fields in the northeast to refineries in thewest.
Government efforts to encourage exploration by foreign oil companies further increased output, and by the mid-1970s petroleum had become Syria’s leadingexport.
Since then, however, the sector has suffered from periodic declines in world oil prices and from wider Syrian economic troubles.
Existing reserves are depletingrapidly and may be exhausted in the early 21st century.
The Syrian government is encouraging foreign companies to explore for new oil fields near the Iraqi andTurkish borders.
Production of crude petroleum was 169 million barrels in 2004.
Syria also produces smaller amounts of natural gas.
C Manufacturing
The Syrian government nationalized most major industries by the late 1960s.
Large-scale heavy industry continues to be dominated by the state, but since the early1990s Syria has encouraged the development of privately owned light industries.
Textiles—cotton yarn and cotton, woolen, and silk fabrics—constitute the largest singlemanufacturing industry in Syria.
As in centuries past, Syrian artisans continue to be noted for the fine quality of their silk brocades and rugs and for their artisticmetalwork in brass, copper, silver, iron, and steel.
Other major manufactured goods include cement, fertilizers, glass, olive oil, and household appliances andelectronics.
D Energy
Syria’s hydroelectric and thermal power plants typically produce enough electricity to meet the country’s needs, but electricity shortages occur periodically.
Thecountry’s total electrical output in 2003 was 27.2 billion kilowatt-hours.
E Currency and Banking
The basic unit of currency is the Syrian pound, divided into 100 piasters (11.20 pounds equal U.S.$1; 2006 average).
The Syrian pound is issued by the state-owned Central Bank of Syria.
The Syrian government exercised complete control over the banking sector from the mid-1950s until 2002, when it began to allow theestablishment of privately owned banks.
F Foreign Trade
Before the 1990s Syria imported considerably more than it exported each year.
However, Syria’s closer alliance with Western nations and the Gulf States in theaftermath of the Persian Gulf War (1991) stimulated high economic growth in the private sector and increased export earnings.
In 2003 Syrian imports totaled $5.1billion, and exports totaled $5.7 billion.
The principal imports were manufactures of many types, including machinery, transportation equipment, iron and steel, refinedpetroleum, textiles, and chemical products.
Syria also imported grain, livestock products, and other agricultural goods.
The principal exports were petroleum, cotton andother textiles, preserved foods, beverages, tobacco, phosphates, fruits, and vegetables.
The chief buyers of Syrian exports were Germany, Italy, France, Turkey, andSaudi Arabia.
Imports were supplied chiefly by Italy, Germany, France, the United States, and South Korea.
Much revenue was derived from fees charged to foreigncountries for piping oil through Syria.
Considerable foreign currency also came from the expenditures of the many tourists who visit the country each year.
In November1995 Syria and several other Middle Eastern and North African countries signed an agreement with the European Union to create a Mediterranean free-trade zone by2010.
G Transportation and Communications
Transportation and communications facilities in Syria are owned and operated by the state.
Some 2,702 km (1,679 mi) of railroads connect the major cities of Syria andextend to the national frontiers of all neighboring countries except Israel.
Syria has 94,890 km (58,962 mi) of roads, of which 14 percent are paved.
In 2004 there were.
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