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CIA World Factbook 1986 (Internet Archive)

Cuba

1986 Edition · 37 data fields

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Geography

Agriculture

main crops — sugar, tobacco, rice, potatoes, tubers, citrus fruits, coffee

Aid

from US (FY46-61), $41.5 million (loans $37.5 million, grants $4.0 million); economic aid from USSR (1961-84), $10.6 billion in economic credit and $27.0 billion in subsidies; military assistance from the USSR (1959-78), $1.6 billion

Area

300km North Atlantic Ocean Isla de la Juventud Caribbean Sea See regioni! map III Land 114,471 km2; nearly as large as Pennsylvania; 35% cultivated; 30% meadow and pasture; 20% waste, urban, or other; 15% forest Water

Branches

executive; legislature (National Assembly of the People's Power); controlled judiciary

Budget

$12.1 billion (1984)

Capital

Havana

CNP

$14.9 billion in 1974 dollars (1982 est); $1,530 per capita in 1974 dollars (1982 est); real growth rate 1.4% (1982 est.)

Coastline

3,735 km People

Communists

approx. 400,000 party members

Crude steel

338,200 metric tons produced (1984); 34 kg per capita

Elections

National People's Assembly (indirect election) every five years; last election held November 1981 Political parties and leaders: Cuban Communist Party (PCC), First Secretary Fidel Castro Ruz, Second Secretary Raul Castro Ruz

Electric power

3,461,000 kW capacity (1985); 12.915 billion kWh produced (1985), 1, 278 kWh per capita

Ethnic divisions

51% mulatto, 37% white, 11% black, 1% Chinese

Exports

$6.2 billion (f.o.b., 1984); sugar, nickel, shellfish, tobacco, coffee, citrus

Fishing

catch 198,400 metric tons (1984); exports $102 million (1984 est.)

Government leader

Fidel CASTRO Ruz, President (since January 1959)

Imports

$8.1 billion (c.i.f., 1984); capital goods, industrial raw materials, food, petroleum

Infant mortality rate

15/1,000(1985)

Labor force

3.0 million in 1982; 47% industry and commerce, 28% services and government, 25% agriculture Government

Language

Spanish

Legal system

based on Spanish and American law, with large elements of Communist legal theory; Fundamental Law of 1959 replaced constitution of 1940; a new constitution was approved at the Cuban Communist Party's First Party Congress in December 1975 and by a popular referendum, which took place on 15 February 1976; portions of the new constitution were put into effect on 24 February 1976, by means of a Constitutional Transition Law, and the entire constitution became effective on 2 December 1976; legal education at the Universities of Havana, Oriente, and Las Villas; does not accept compulsory ICJ jurisdiction

Life expectancy

74

Limits of territorial waters (claimed)

12 nm (200 nm exclusive economic zone)

Literacy

96%

Major industries

sugar milling, petroleum refining, food and tobacco processing, textiles, chemicals, paper and wood products, metals, cement

Major trade partners

exports — 72% USSR, 17% other Communist countries; imports — 66% USSR, 18% other Communist countries (1984)

Member of

CEMA, ECLA, FAO, G-77, GATT, lADB(nonparticipant), IAEA, ICAO, IFAD, ICO, IHO, ILO, IMO, IRC, ISO, ITU, IWC— International Wheat Council, NAM, OAS (nonparticipant), PAHO, Permanent Court of Arbitration, Postal Union of the Americas and Spain, SELA, UN, UNESCO, UNIDO, UPU, WFTU, WHO, WIPO, WMO, WSG, WTO Economy

National holiday

Anniversary of the Revolution, 1 January

Nationality

noun — Cuban(s); adjective — Cuban

Natural resources

cobalt, nickel, iron, copper, manganese, salt, forests -

Official name

Republic of Cuba

Political subdivisions

14 provinces and 169 municipalities

Population

10,221,000 (July 1986), average annual growth rate 1.1%

Religion

at least 85% nominally Roman Catholic before Castro assumed power

Shortages

spare parts for transportation and industrial machinery, consumer goods

Suffrage

universal but not compulsory over age 16

Type

Communist state

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