Macedonia Statistical Yearbook (1999-2023)

Data year: 1999-2023

Data format: pdf, excel

the data shows:

(4) Party of Democratic Prosperity: Founded in May 1990, it is an Albanian political party. It advocates equality among ethnic groups and calls for amending the constitution so that the Albanians have the status of the dominant ethnic group and Albanian becomes the second official language of Maldives. Chairman Abdurahman Haliti.

  (5) The Social Democratic Union of Macedonia: formerly known as the Macedonian Communist Union, it was renamed the Macedonian Communist Union-Democratic Reform Party in 1989 and its current name in 1993. Internally, it advocates the establishment of a democratic Macedonian state and a new economic system that follows the laws of market economy. Externally, it implements a peaceful foreign policy, is committed to joining the EU and NATO, and develops equidistant good-neighborly relations with neighboring countries. The party had been in power for a long time. In November 1998, it lost the Malay parliamentary election and became an opposition party. In May 2001, Ma formed a "political unity government" with the Social Democratic League participating in the government; it withdrew from the coalition government in November of the same year. Chairman Branko Crvenkovski.

  [Important figure] Boris Trajkovsky: President. Born in June 1956 in the Republic of Macedonia, of Macedonian ethnicity. Graduated from the Law Faculty of the University of Skopje in 1980. Before 1997, he was the head of the legal department of the construction company "Sloboda" in Skopje. From 1997 to 1998, he served as Director of the Office of the Mayor of Serlavoda District, Skopje. From the end of 1998 to October 1999, he served as Vice Minister of Foreign Affairs. Elected president in December 1999. Visited China in April 2002. Loves tennis and walking. Married with a daughter and a son.

  Lyupcho Georgievsky: Prime Minister. Born in Shtip in 1966. Graduated from the Department of Language and Literature of the University of Skopje. In 1990, he established an internal revolutionary organization in Macedonia, the Democratic Party for the National Unity of Macedonia, and serves as its chairman to this day. Elected vice president in 1991, he resigned from the post eight months later. He was elected as a member of parliament in October 1998 and became prime minister in November. Poet, married.

  [Economy] Horses are an economically backward country in the former Yugoslavia. Since independence, Maldives' economy has been severely affected by international sanctions on Yugoslavia, Greece's blockade of Maldives and NATO's bombing of Yugoslavia. In 1996, the economy began to recover and grow. At the end of 1994, Malaysia enacted a privatization law to transition to a market economy. By the end of 1997, 1,050 of the country's 1,350 enterprises had completed privatization. The economic income generated by private enterprises and privatized enterprises accounted for 70% of the country's total income, and their output value accounted for 80% of the GDP. In 2001, the Malaysian economy was hit hard due to the deterioration of the national security situation. The main problems existing in the economic development of Malaysia are: first, political instability; second, lack of funds and sluggish investment, resulting in high unemployment rate.

  Gross Domestic Product (2001): US$3.72 billion.

  GDP per capita (2001): US$1,823.

  GDP growth: -4.6%.

  Currency name: Denar. 1 denar = 100 deni (Deni)

  Exchange rate (December 31, 2001): 1 US dollar = 69.17 denars.

  Inflation rate (2001): 5.3%.

  Unemployment rate (2001): 30.5%.

  [Resources] Mineral resources are relatively abundant, mainly including coal, iron, lead, zinc, copper, etc., of which the coal reserves are 125 million tons. Forest coverage rate is 35%.

  [Industry] Employees account for 38% of the total labor force. In 2001, the total industrial output value was 53.7 billion denars, accounting for 21.6% of the GDP. The industrial employed population is 111,000, accounting for 36% of the total employed population. The main industrial sectors include ore mining, metallurgy, chemical industry, electric power, wood processing, food processing, etc. The output of major industrial products in 1999 was: 6.84 billion kWh of electricity, 7.29 million tons of coal, 49,000 tons of steel, 5,694 tons of aluminum, 27,000 tons of lead, 87,000 tons of sulfuric acid, 92 tons of plastics, 3,859 tons of man-made fibers, and 560,000 tons of cement. , 9,320 tons of paper and 37,000 cubic meters of wood.

  [Agriculture and animal husbandry] There are 15,000 employees, accounting for 2.5% of the total employed population. In 1998, the total output value of agriculture, animal husbandry and fishery was 19.1 billion denars, accounting for 10% of the gross national product. The output of the main agricultural products is as follows (unit: tons):

         1998  1999    2000

  Wheat 125522 110597 290000

  Tama rice 8023 9065 130000

  Grape 84371 82740 /

  Beet 18656 25857 56000

  Sunflower 9069 9170 7000

  Tobacco 508 676 22000

  Meat 25971 26512 27000

  Milk (100 million liters) 0.22 0.23 2.2

  

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Origin blog.csdn.net/uranusautism/article/details/135372193