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CIA World Factbook 1988 (Internet Archive)

Guadeloupe

1988 Edition · 47 data fields

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Geography

Climate

subtropical tempered by trade winds; relatively high humidity

Coastline

306 km

Comparative area

about half the size of Rhode Island

Continental shelf

200 meters or to depth of exploitation

Environment

subject to hurricanes (June :o December) special notes: none

Ethnic divisions

90% black or mulatto; 3% white; less than 5% East Indian, Lebanese, Chinese

Extended economic zone

200 nm

Infant mortality rate

18.6/1,000 (1983)

Labor force

120,000; services, government, and commerce 53.0%; industry 25.8%; agriculture 21.2%; significant unemployment

Land use

18% arable land; 5% permanent Drops; 13% meadows and pastures; 40% Forest and woodland; 24% other; includes 1% irrigated

Language

French, Creole patois

Life expectancy

67

Literacy

over 70%

Organized labor

11% of labor force

Population

336,354 (July 1987), average innual growth rate 0.61%

Religion

95% Roman Catholic, 5% Hindu and pagan African

Terrain

BasseTerre is volcanic in origin with interior mountains; Grand-Terre is low limestone formation

Territorial sea

12 nm

Total area

1,780 km2; land area: 1,760 km2

Total area

20km ties des Samtes •s SM regloni) map III St Martin and St Barthelemy are not shown

Vationality

noun — Guadeloupian(s); idjective — Guadeloupe

Government

Administrative divisions

3 arrondissements; 34 communes, each with a locally elected municipal council

Branches

executive, Prefect appointed by Paris; legislative, popularly elected General Council of 36 members and a Regional Council composed of members of the local General Council and the locally elected deputies and senators to the French parliament; judicial, under jurisdiction of French judicial system

Capital

Basse-Terre

Communists

3,000 est.

Elections

General Council elections are normally held every five years; last General Council election took place in June 1981; regional assembly elections held in February 1983 Political parties and leaders: Rally for the Republic (RPR), Gabriel Lisette; Communist Party of Guadeloupe (PCG), Henri Bangou; Socialist Party (MSG), leader unknown; Progressive Party of Guadeloupe (PPG), Henri Rodes; Independent Republicans; Federation of the Left; Union for French Democracy (UDF); Union for a New Majority (UNM); Socialist Party Federation of Guadeloupe (PS)

Government leader

Yves BONNET, Prefect of the Republic (since 1985)

Legal system

French legal system; highest court is a court of appeal based in Martinique with jurisdiction over Guadeloupe, French Guiana, and Martinique

Member of

WFTU

Official name

Department of Guadeloupe

Other political or pressure groups

Popular Union for the Liberation of Guadeloupe (UPLG), Caribbean Revolutionary Alliance (ARC), Popular Movement for Independent Guadeloupe (MPGI), Union for the Liberation of Guadeloupe (UPLG), General Union of Guadeloupe Workers (UGTG), General Federation of Guadeloupe Workers (CGT-G)

Suffrage

universal over age 18

Type

overseas department and region of France; represented by three deputies in the French National Assembly and two senators in the Senate; last Assembly election, 21 June 1981

Voting strength

3 deputies in French National Assembly; 2 senators in Senate; 1 councillor on Economic and Social Council; in Regional Council election of February 1983— RPR 21 seats, PCG 11 seats, PS 9 seats

Economy

Agriculture

sugarcane, bananas, pineapples, vegetables

Aid

bilateral ODA and OOF commitments (1970-79) from Western (non-US) countries, $2.4 billion

Budget

$198 million (1981)

Electric power

103,000 kW capacity; 315 million kWh produced, 940 kWh per capita (1986)

Exports

$89.2 million (1981); bananas, sugar, rum

Fiscal year

calendar year

GNP

$998 million (1983), $3,151 per capita; real growth rate 15.7% (1979-80 average)

Imports

$560 million (1981); vehicles, foodstuffs, clothing and other consumer goods, construction materials, petroleum products

Major industries

construction, cement, rum, light industry, tourism

Major trade partners

exports — 88% franc zone; imports — 73% franc zone, 3% Italy (1981)

Monetary conversion rate

6.62 French francs=US$l (November 1986)

Natural resources

scenery, cultivable land

Communications

Railroads

privately owned, narrow-gauge plantation lines

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