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CIA World Factbook 1987 (Internet Archive)

Mexico

1987 Edition · 276 data fields

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Geography

Boundary disputes

none; maritime dispute with USSR; territorial claim in Antarctica (Queen Maud Land)
Administrative Line with PDRY; no defined boundary with most of UAE, Administrative Line in far north; no defined boundary with Saudi Arabia
Cambodia (three areas); occupies Cambodia; sporadic border clashes with China; involved in complex dispute over Spratly Islands with China, Malaysia, Philippines, Taiwan, and possibly Brunei; maritime dispute with China; dispute with China over Paracel Islands

Climate

varies from tropical to desert
temperate along coast, modified by Gulf Stream; colder interior
dry desert; hot, humid along coast; hot, dry interior; strong southwest summer monsoon (May to September) in far south
temperate with cold, cloudy, moderately severe winters with frequent precipitation; mild summers with frequent showers and thundershowers
tropical in south; monsoonal in north with hot, rainy season (mid-May to mid-September) and warm, dry season (mid-October to mid-March)

Coastline

9,330 km
21,925 km (3,419 km mainland; 2,413 kim large islands; 16,093 km long fjords, numerous small islands, and minor indentations)
2,092 km
491 km
3,444 km (excluding islands)

Comparative area

about three times the size of Texas

Contiguous zone

10 nm
24 nm

Continental shelf

200 meters or to depth of exploitation
200 meters or to depth of exploitation
edge of continental margin or 200 nm

Environment

subject to destructive earthquakes in center and south; natural water resources scarce in north, inaccessible and poor quality in center and extreme southeast; deforestation; soil erosion widespread; desertification
air and water pollution; acid rain
summer winds often raise large sandstorms and duststorms in interior; sparse natural fresh water resources
plain crossed by a few north-flowing, meandering streams
occasional typhoons (May to January) with extensive flooding

Exclusive fishing zone

200 nm

Extended economic zone

200 nm
200 nm
200 nm
200 nm

Land boundaries

4,220 km total
2,579 km total
1,384 km total
3,090 km total
4,562 km total

Land use

12% arable land; 1% permanent crops; 89% meadows and pastures; 24% forest and woodland; 24% other; includes 8% irrigated
3% arable land; 0% permanent crops; NEGL% meadows and pastures; 27% forest and woodland; 70% other; includes NEGL% irrigated
NEGL% arable land; NEGL% permanent crops; 5% meadows and pastures; 0% forest and woodland; 95% other; includes NEGL% irrigated
48% arable land; 1% permanent crops; 18% meadows and pastures; 29% forest and woodland; 9% other; includes NEGL& irrigated
22% arable land; 2% permanent crops; 1% meadows and pastures; 40% forest and woodland; 35% other; includes 5% irrigated

Special notes

strategic location on southern border of US
strategic location adjacent to sea lanes and air routes in North Atlantic; one of most rugged and longest coastlines in world; Norway and Turkey only NATO members having a boundary with the USSR
strategic location with small foothold on Musandam Peninsula controlling Strait of Hormuz (17% of world’s daily oil production transits this point going from Persian Gulf to Arabian Sea)
historic area on North European Plain for conflict because of flat terrain and lack of natural barriers
none

Terrain

mostly high, ragged mountains with low coastal plains and high plateaus
glaciated; mostly high plateaus and rugged mountains broken by fertile valleys; small, scattered plains; coastline deeply indented by fjords; arctic tundra in north
vast central desert plain, rugged mountains in north and south
mostly flat plain, mountains along southern border
low, flat delta in south and north; central highlands; hilly, mountainous in far north and northwest

Territorial sea

2 nm
4 nm
12 nm
12 nm
12 nm

Total area

1,972,550 km; land area: 1,923,040 km?

People and Society

Ethnic divisions

60% mestizo (IndianSpanish), 30% Amerindian or predominantly Amerindian, 9% white or predominantly white, 1% other
almost entirely Arab, with small Baluchi, Zanzibari, and Indian groups
98.7% Polish, 0.6% Ukrainian, 0.5% Byelorussian, less than 0.05% Jewish
85-90% predominantly Vietnamese; 3% Chinese; ethnic minorities include Muong, Thai, Meo, Khmer, Man, Cham; other mountain tribes

Infant mortality rate

51.0/1,000 (1984)
7.9/1,000 (1983)
121/1,000 (1983)
19.3/1,000 (1984)
53/1,000 (1983)

Labor force

26,320,000 (1985); 31.4% services; 26% agriculture, forestry, hunting, fishing; 18.9% commerce; 12.8% manufacturing; 9.5% construction; 4.8% transportation; 1.8% mining and quarrying; 0.3% electricity; 10% unemployed, 40% underemployed
2.064 million (1985); 30.9% services; 19.6% mining and manufacturing; 16.7% commerce; 8.8% transportation; 7.6% construction; 7.2% agriculture, forestry, fishing; 5.7% banking and financial services (1983); 2.8% unemployed (1985)
430,000; 58% are non-Omani; est. 60% agriculture
17.54 million; 44% industry and commerce, 30% agriculture, 11% services, 8% government (1985)
31.20 million, not including military

Language

Spanish
Norwegian (official); small Lappand Finnish-speaking minorities
Arabic (official); English, Baluchi, Urdu, Indian dialects
Polish, no significant dialects
Vietnamese (official), French, Chinese, English, Khmer, tribal languages (Mon-Khmer and Malayo-Polynesian)

Life expectancy

65.4
men 72.7, women 79.5
men 51, women 54 Litéracy: 20%
71.6
men 62, women 66

Literacy

88.1%
100%
98%
78%

Nationality

noun—Mexican(s); adjective— Mexican
noun—Norwegian(s); adjective—Norwegian Ethnic divisions; Germanic (Nordic, Alpine, Baltic) and racial-cultural minority of 20,000 Lapps
noun—Omani(s); adjective— Omani
noun—Pole(s); adjective— Polish
noun— Vietnamese (sing. and pl.); adjective— Vietnamese

Organized labor

35% of total labor force
66% of labor force (1985)
new government trade unions formed following dissolution of Solidarity and all government unions in October 1982

Population

81,860,566 (July 1987), average annual growth rate 2.09%
4,178,545 (July 1987), average annual growth rate 0.30%
1,226,923 (July 1987), average annual growth rate 3.10%
37,726,699 (July 1987), average annual growth rate 0.67%
63,585,121 (July 1987), average annual growth rate 2.49%

Religion

97% nominally Roman Catholic, 3% Protestant
94% Evangelical Lutheran (state church), 4% other Protestant and Roman Catholic, 2% other
75% Ibadhi Muslim; remainder Sunni Muslim, Shi'a Muslim, some Hindu
95% Roman Catholic (about 75% practicing), 5% Uniate, Greek Orthodox, Protestant, and other
Buddhist, Confucian, Taoist, Roman Catholic, indigenous beliefs, Islamic, Protestant

Government

Administrative divisions

31 states and the Federal District
20 counties, 407 communes, 47 towns
1 province (Dhofar), 2 governorates (Musandam and Muscat), and numerous districts (wilayats)
49 provinces
40 provinces, under central government control

Branches

dominant executive, bicameral legislature (National Congress—Senate, Federal Chamber of Deputies), Supreme Court
legislative authority rests jointly with Crown and parliament (Storting— Lagting, upper house; Odelsting, lower house); executive power vested in Crown but exercised by Cabinet responsible to parliament; Supreme Court, 5 superior courts, 104 lower courts
executive—Sultan, who appoints 45-member State Consultative Assembly to advise him; judicial—traditional Islamic judges and a nascent civil court system
unicameral legislature (Sejm), executive, judicial system dominated by parallel Communist party apparatus
unicameral legislature (National Assembly); highest authority of the land is technically the Council] of State, whose chairman serves as the country’s President; Council of Ministers oversees implementation of party policies—chairman is equivalent of premier

Capital

Mexico
Oslo
Muscat
Warsaw
Hanoi

Communists

15,500 est.; 5,500 Norwegian Communist Party (NKP); 10,000 Workers Communist Party Marxist-Leninist (AKP-ML, pro-Chinese)
2.1 million (1986)
probably more than 1 million

Dependent areas

Bouvet Island, Jan Mayen, Peter I Island, Svalbard

Elections

next presidential election to be held in 1988 Political parties and leaders: (recognized parties) Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI), Jorge de la Vega; National Action Party (PAN), Pablo Emilio Madero; Popular Socialist Party (PPS), Jorge Cruickshank Garcia; Unified Socialist Party of Mexico (PSUM), Pablo Gomez Alvarez; Mexican Democratic Party (PDM), Ignacio Gonzalez Gollaz; Socialist Workers Party (PST), Pedro Etiene; Revolutionary Workers Party (PRT), Ricardo Pascoe Pierce; Mexican Workers Party (PMT), Heberto Castillo Martinez; Authentic Party of the Revolution (PARM), Carlos Enrique Cantu Rosas
held every four years (next in 1989) Politica] parties and leaders: Labor, Gro Harlem Brundtland; Conservative, Rolf Presthus; Center, Johan J. Jakobsen; Christian People’s, Kjell Magne Bondevik; Liberal, Arne Fjortoft; Socialist Left, Theo Koritzinsky; Norwegian Communist, Hans I. Kleven; Progressive, Carl 1. Hagen Voting strength; (1985 election) Labor, 40.8%; Conservative, 30.4%; Christian People’s, 8.3%; Center, 6.6%; Socialist Left (Socialist Electoral Alliance), 5.5%; Progressive, 3.7%; Liberal, 3.1%; Red Electoral Alliance, 0.6%; Liberal People’s Party (antitax), 0.5%; Norwegian Communist, 0.2%; other 0.4%
parliamentary and local government every four years; last election held October 1985 Political party and leader: Polish United (Communist) Workers’ Party (PZPR), Poland (continued) Woiciech Jaruzelski, First Secretary (since October 1981)
pro forma elections held for national and local assemblies; last election for National Assembly held on 25 April Political party and leader: Vietnam Communist Party (VCP), Nguyen Van Linh

Government leader

Miguel DE LA MADRID Hurtado, President (since December 1982)
QABOOS bin Said, Sultan (since July 1970)
Nguyen Van LINH, Secretary General of the Communist Party (since December 1986)

Government leaders

OLAV V, King (since 1957); Gro Harlem BRUNDTLAND, Prime Minister (since May 1986)
Zbigniew MESSNER, Chairman of Council of Ministers (Premier; since November 1985); Army Gen. Wojciech JARUZELSKI, Chairman of Council of State (President; since November 1985)

Legal system

mixture of US constitutional theory and civil law system; constitution established in 1917; judicial review of legislative acts; accepts compulsory [CJ jurisdiction, with reservations
mixture of customary law, civil law system, and common law traditions; constitution adopted in 1814 and modified in 1884; Supreme Court renders advisory opinions to legislature when asked; accepts compulsory 1CJ jurisdiction, with reservations
based on English common law and Islamic law; no constitution; ultimate appeal to the Sultan; has not accepted compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
mixture of Continental (Napoleonic) civil law and Communist legal theory; constitution adopted 1952; court system parallels administrative divisions with Supreme Court, composed of 104 justices, at apex; no judicial review of legislative acts; has not accepted compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
based on Communist legal theory and French civil law system

Member of

FAO, G-77, GATT, IADB, IAEA, IBRD, ICAC, ICAO, ICO, IDA, [DB—Inter-American Development Bank, IFAD, IFC, ILO, International Lead and Zinc Study Group, IMF, IMO, INTELSAT, INTERPOL, IRC, ISO, ITU, IWC—International Whaling Commission, LAIJA, OAS, PAHO, SELA, UN, UNESCO, UPU, WHO, WIPO, WMO, WSG, WTO, Group of Six
ADB, Council of Europe, DAC, EC (Free Trade Agreement), EFTA, ESRO (observer), FAO, GATT, IAEA, IBRD, ICAC, 1CAO, ICES, ICO, IDA, IEA (associate member), IFAD, [FC, [HO, ILO, IMF, IMO, INTELSAT, INTERPOL, International Lead and Zinc Study Group, IPU, ITU, [WC—International Whaling Commission, 1!WC—International Wheat Council, NATO, Nordic Council, OECD, UN, UNESCO, UPU, WHO, WIPO, WMO, WSG
Arab League, FAO, G-77, GCC, IBRD, ICAO, IDA, IDB—Islamic Development Bank, IFAD, IFC, IMF, IMO, INTELSAT, INTERPOL, ITU, NAM, OIC, UN, UNESCO, UPU, WFTU, WHO, WMO
CEMA, FAO, GATT, IAEA, ICAO, ICES, THO, ILO, Indochina Truce Commission, IMO, International Lead and Zinc Study Group, IPU, ISO, ITC, ITU, Korea Truce Commission, UN, UNESCO, UPU, WFTU, WHO, Warsaw Pact, WIPO, WMO, WTO
ADB, CEMA, Colombo Plan, ESCAP, FAO, G-77, IAEA, IBRD, ICAO, IDA, IFAD, IFC, ILO, IMF, INTELSAT, IRC, ITU, Mekong Committee, NAM, UN, UNDP, UNESCO, UNICEF, UPU, WFTU, WHO, WIPO, WMO, WTO

National holiday

Independence Day, 16 September
Constitution Day, 17 May
National Day, 18-19 November
National Liberation Day, 22 July
2 September

Official name

United Mexican States
Kingdom of Norway
Sultanate of Oman
Polish People’s Republic
Socialist Republic of Vietnam

Other political or pressure groups

Roman Catholic Church, Confederation of Mexican Workers (CTM), Confederation of Industrial Chambers (CONCAMIN), Confederation of National Chambers of Commerce (CONCANACO), National Peasant Confederation (CNC), National Confederation of Popular Organizations (CNOP), Revolutionary Confederation of Workers and Peasants (CROC)
outlawed Popular Front for the Liberation of Oman (PFLO), based in South Yemen
United Peasant Party (ZSL), Democratic Party (SD); powerful Roman Catholic Church, Patriotic Movement of National Rebirth (PRON)

Political parties

none

Suffrage

universal over age 18; compulsory but unenforced
universal at age 18 but not compulsory
universal and compulsory over age 18
universal over age 18

Type

federal republic operating under a centralized government
constitutional monarchy
absolute monarchy; independent, with residual UK influence
Communist state
Communist state

Voting strength

(1985 congressional election) 66% PRI, 15% PAN, 3% PSUM, 3% PDM, 2% PST, 2% PPS, 2% PARM, 2% PMT, 1% PRT, 4% other parties or annulled
(October 1985 election) 78.86% voted for Communist-approved candidates

Economy

Agriculture

corn, cotton, wheat, coffee, sugarcane, sorghum, oilseed, pulses, and vegetables; an illegal producer of opium poppy and cannabis for the international drug trade Mexico (continued)
animal husbandry predominates; main crops—feed grains, potatoes, fruits, vegetables; 40% self-sufficient; food shortages—food grains, sugar
based on subsistence farming (fruits, dates, cereals, cattle, camels), fishing
self-sufficient for minimum requirements; main crops—grain, sugar beets, oilseed, potatoes, exporter of livestock products and sugar; importer of grains
main crops—rice, rubber, fruits and vegetables; some corn, manioc, sugarcane; major food imports—wheat, corn, dairy products

Aid

US, including Ex-Im (FY70-85), $2.9 billion; (ODA and OOF) Western (non-US) countries (1970-84), $4.3 billion; Communist countries (1970-85), $110 million
donor—ODA and OOF commitments (1970-84), $2.4 billion

Budget

(at average controlled rate of exchange) public sector, budgeted revenues, $73.3 billion; budgeted expenditures, $86.5 billion (1985)
revenues $25.9 billion, expenditures, $23.1 billion, (converted at 1985 exchange rate of Nkr 8.597=US$]1)
(1985) revenues, $4.5 billion; expenditures, $5.7 billion

Crude petroleum

785,000 b/d, exports $6.5 billion (1985)

Crude steel

10 million metric tons capacity (1984); 7.3 million metric tons produced, 95 kg per capita (1985)
924,000 metric tons produced (1985), 228 kg per capita
16.1 million metric tons produced, about 430 kg per capita (1985)

Electric power

23,054,000 kW capacity; 90,490 million kWh produced, 1,110 kWh per capita (1986)
23,435,000 kW capacity; 122,650 million kWh produced, 29,450 kWh per capita (1986)
1,111,000 kW capacity; 2,920 million kWh produced, 2,300 kWh per capita (1986)
80,737,000 kW capacity; 141,500 million kWh produced, 3,740 kWh per capita (1986)
1,914,000 kW capacity; 5,400 million kWh produced, 90 kWh per capita (1986)

Exports

$21.866 billion (f.0.b., 1985); cotton, coffee, nonferrous minerals (including lead and zinc), shrimp, petroleum, sulfur, salt, cattle and meat, fresh fruit, tomatoes, machinery and equipment
$18.7 billion (f.0.b., 1985); oil, natural gas, metals, chemicals, machinery, fish and fish products, pulp and paper, ships
$5.0 billion (f.0.b., 1985), mostly petroleum; nonoil consist mostly of reexports, processed copper, and some agricultural goods
$17.8 billion (f.0.b., 1985); 89.7% machinery and equipment; 23.8% fuels, minerals, and metals; 9.5% chemicals, 7.4% manufactured consumer goods; 4.7% agricultural and forestry products; 14.9% other (1985)
$763 million (1984); agricultural and handicraft products, coal, minerals, ores

Fiscal year

calendar year
calendar year
calendar year
calendar year
calendar year

Fishing

catch 1,500,000 metric tons (1985); exports valued at $481 million, imports at $21.9 million (1982)
catch 2.48 million metric tons (1984); exports $765 million (1985)
catch 650,000 million metric tons (1985)
catch 539,000 metric tons (1984)

GDP

$147.2 billion, $1,870 per capita; 62% private consumption, 11% private investment, 9% public consumption, 7% public investment; net foreign balance 5%; real growth rate, 2.7%; average inflation rate 58% (1985)
$56.7 billion in 1984, $13,700 per capita; 49.6% private consumption; 18.9% government consumption; 25.4% gross fixed investment; 3.3% change in stockbuilding; net exports of goods and services 8.0%; real growth rate 3.5% (1985)
$9.0 billion, $7,800 per capita (1985 est.)

GNP

$240.6 billion (1985), $6,420 per capita; growth rate 1.6%; inflation rate 15% (1985)
$18.1 billion, $300 per capita (1984) at official exchange rates of 12.1 dong=US$1

Imports

$13.460 billion (f.0.b., 1985); machinery, equipment, industrial vehicles, and intermediate goods
$14.5 billion (c.i.f., 1985); machinery, fuels and lubricants, transport equipment, chemicals, foodstuffs, clothing, ships
$3.4 billion ( c.i.f., 1985), machinery, transportation equipment, manufactured goods, food, livestock, lubricants
$17.4 billion (f.0.b., 1985); 33.7% machinery and equipment; 30.4% fuels, minerals, and metals; 14.2% chemicals, 7.3% manufactured consumer goods, 4.7% agricultural and forestry products; 9.7% other (1985)
$1,823 million (1984); petroleum, steel products, railroad equipment, chemicals, medicines, raw cotton, fertilizer, grain

Major industries

processing of food, beverages, and tobacco; chemicals, basic metals and metal products, petroleum products, mining, textiles and clothing, and transport equipment
oil and gas, food processing, shipbuilding, wood pulp, paper products, metals, chemicals
crude petroleum production 550,000 b/d (1986)
machinebuilding, iron and steel, extractive industries, chemicals, shipbuilding, food processing
food processing, textiles, machinebuilding, mining, cement, chemical fertilizer, glass, tires, oil

Major trade partners

exports—60% US, 10% EC, 8% Japan (1985); imports—67% US, 11% EC, 5% Japan
exports—68.8% EC (35.6% UK, 15.6% FRG), 8.8% Sweden, 8.1% LDC, 5.17 US; imports—47.4% EC (16.1% FRG, 10.0% UK), 17.8% Sweden, 7.2% US, 6.7% LDC (1985)
exports—-59% Japan, 15% Korea, 7% Thailand; imports— 23% UK, 20% Japan, 16% UAE, 7% FRG (1985)
$34.6 billion (1985); 61% Communist countries, 32% developed countries, 7% less developed countries
exports—USSR, East European countries, Japan, other Asian markets; imports—USSR, East Europe, Japan

Military transfers

US (FY70-85), $8 million

Monetary conversion rate

dual exchange rates—controlled rate 1,022 pesos=US$1; free rate 1,019=US$1 (both rates as of 16 February 1987, set daily by the Mexican Government)
7.5 Norwegian kroners=US$1 (October 1986)
.385 rial=US$1 (January 1987)
148 zlotys= US$1 (December 1985)
official rate 80 dong=US$1 (November 1986)

Natural resources

petroleum, silver, copper, gold, lead, zinc, natural gas, timber
oil, copper, gas, pyrites, nickel, iron, zinc, lead, fish, timber, hydroelectric power
oil, copper, asbestos, some marble, limestone, chromium, gypsum
coal, sulfur, copper, natural gas, silver
phosphates, coal, manganese, bauxite, apatite, chromate, possible offshore oil deposits, forests

Shortages

most raw materials except timber, petroleum, iron, copper, and ilmenite ore; dairy products and fish
foodgrains, petroleum, capital goods and machinery, fertilizer

Communications

Airfields

1,905 total, 1,715 usable; 182 with permanent-surface runways; 3 with runways over 3,659 m, 28 with runways 2,440-3,659 m, 273 with runways 1,220-2,439 m
124 total, 119 usable; 6 with permanent-surface runways; 1 with runways over 3,659 m, 4 with runways 2,440-3,659 m, 57 with runways 1,220-2,439 m
160 total; 36 with runways 2,500 m or longer
217 total, 128 usable; 46 with permanent-surface runways; 12 with runways 2,440-3,659 m, 28 with runways 1,220-2,439 m

Civil air

174 major transport aircraft
27 major transport aircraft, including multinationally owned Gulf Air Fleet
controlled by military

Freight carried

rail—419.4 million metric tons, 120.6 billion metric ton/km (1985); highway—1,394 million metric tons, 36.5 billion metric ton/km (1985); inland waterway—14.54 million metric tons, 1.41 billion metric ton/km (1985); ocean— 177.75 billion metric ton/km (1985)

Highways

210,000 km total; 65,000 km paved, 30,000 km semipaved or cobblestone, 60,000 km rural roads (improved earth) or roads under construction, 55,000 km unimproved earth roads
79,540 km total; 18,600 km concrete, bituminous, stone block; 19,980 km bituminous treated; 40,960 km gravel, crushed stone, and earth
16,900 km total; 2,200 km bituminous surface, 14,700 km motorable track
299,887 km total; 130,000 km improved hard service (concrete, asphalt, stone block); 24,000 km unimproved hard service (crushed stone, gravel); 100,000 km earth; 4,588 km other urban roads (1985)
about 85,000 km total; 9,400 km bituminous, 48,700 km gravel or improved earth, 26,900 km unimproved earth

Inland waterways

2,900 km navigable rivers and coastal canals
1,577 km; 1.5-2.4 m draft vessels maximum
3,989 km navigable rivers and canals (1985)
about 17,702 km navigable; more than 5,149 km navigable at all times by vessels up to 1.8-m draft

Pipelines

crude oil, 4,100 km; refined products, 6,875 km; natural gas, 11,900 km
crude oil 1,300 km; natural gas 1,080 km
4,500 km for natural gas; 1,986 km for crude oil (1984); 360 km for refined products
150 km, refined products

Ports

11 major, 20 minor
2 major, 5 minor
4 major (Gdansk, Gdynia, Szczecin, Swinoujécie), 12 minor (1979); principal inland waterway ports are Gliwice, Wroclaw, and Warsaw (1979) Civil] air: 42 major transport aircraft
9 major, 23 minor

Railroads

20,680 km total; 19,950 km 1.435-meter standard gauge; 730 km 0.914-meter narrow gauge
4,242 km 1.435-meter standard gauge; Norwegian State Railways (NSB) operates 4,242 km (2,442 km electrified and 96 km double track)
none
27,092 km total; 23,961 km 1.435-meter standard gauge, 397 km ].524-meter broad gauge, 2,734 km narrow gauge; 8,964 km double track; 8,902 km electrified; government owned (1985)
2,943 km total; 2,371 1.000meter gauge, 130 km standard gauge, 230 km dual gauge, 212 km unoperable

Telecommunications

highly developed system with extensive radio-relay links; connection into Central American microwave net; 6.41 million telephones (8.9 per 100 popl.); 650 AM, 120 TV, and about 180 low-power TV relay stations; 120 domestic satellite terminals; 2 Atlantic Ocean satellite ground antennas
fair system of open-wire, radio-relay, and radio communications stations; 23,000 telephones (2.2 per 100 popl.); 3 AM, 3 FM, 11 TV stations; 1 Indian Ocean INTELSAT station, 8 domestic satellite stations, 1 ARABSAT satellite station
24 AM, 28 FM, 41 TV stations; 4 Soviet TV relays; 8,864,768 TV sets; 9,286,663 receiver sets; at least 1 satellite ground station
16 AM, 1 FM, 2 TV stations, 2,300,000 TV sets; 6,000,000 receiver sets; at least 2 satellite ground stations

Military and Security

Branches

Army, Air Force, Navy, Marine Corps
Army, Navy, Air Force, Royal Oman Police
Ground Forces, National Air Defense Forces, Air Force Command, Navy
Army, Navy, Air Force

Military budget

for year ending 31 December 1986, $630.1 million; 1.2% of central government expenditures, including support of parastatals
for fiscal year ending 3] December 1986, $1.6 billion; 32% of central government budget
announced for fiscal year ending 31 December 1986, 371.6 billion zlotys; 8.1% of total budget
no expenditure estimates are available; military aid from the USSR has been so extensive that actual allocation of Vietnam’s domestic resources to defense has not been indicative of total military effort

Military manpower

males 15-49, 19,784,000; 14,489,000 fit for military service; 1,030,000 reach military age (18) annually
males 15-49, 290,000; 165,000 fit for military service
males 15-49, 9,398,000; 7,453,000 fit for military service; 267,000 reach military age (19) annually
males 15-49, 15,026,000; 9,582,000 fit for military service; 735,000 reach military age (17) annually

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