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Oriental Republic of Uruguay
religion: Christianity
Agro-Industry Development
Agriculture
While the overall agricultural sector has been
stagnant, crop production has increased. After 2
years of decline, in 1999 crop harvests grew by
10.5 percent and total output was 2.4 million
tons. The main food crops are rice, wheat, corn,
potatoes, barley, sugarcane, and soybeans.
Production of rice in 1999 was 1.3 million tons,
wheat 377,200 tons, and corn 242,500 tons.
Barley harvests dropped significantly as a
result of reduced demand, falling from 340,000
tons in 1996 to 111,000 in 1999.
Total livestock exports were worth US$1 billion
in 2000. The primary livestock products are
beef, veal, horse, chicken, duck, goose, lamb,
pork, and turkey. There were 10.5 million head
of cattle in Uruguay in 1999, and 14.4 million
sheep. An outbreak of foot-and-mouth disease in
1999 led several nations to ban the import of
Uruguayan beef and lamb, but efforts to
eradicate the disease were successful and in
2000 there were record exports. Beef, the main
livestock export, accounted for 58.6 percent of
exports in 2000, followed by lamb (4.12 percent)
and horsemeat (1.4 percent). Mixed meat
byproducts accounted for 30.8 percent of
exports. Israel was the number-one market for
Uruguayan beef, taking 25.09 percent of exports,
although the North American Free Trade Agreement
(NAFTA) countries-the United States, Canada and
Mexico-were the main overall market with 33.4
percent of exports. MERCOSUR accounted for 16
percent of livestock exports and the EU 10.8
percent.
Uruguay has traditionally been better off than many other countries in South America, and is known for its advanced education and social security systems and liberal laws governing social issues such as divorce.
It was among the first nations in Latin America to establish a welfare state, maintained through relatively high taxes on industry. The system, which had increasingly strained state finances, was reformed in the 1990s.
Colonial towns, beach resorts and a year-round mild climate have contributed to a growing tourist industry. The economy has also benefited from offshore banking.
But a dependence on livestock and related exports has left Uruguay vulnerable to ups and downs in world commodity prices. Recessions in Brazil and Argentina - its main export markets and sources of tourists - propelled the country into economic crisis in 2002.
AT-A-GLANCE
Politics: The Broad Front coalition came to power in the 2004 elections and won a second mandate in 2009
Economy: Uruguay is recovering from economic upheaval in 2002, brought on by recessions in Brazil, Argentina
International: Relations with Argentina are strained over two paper mills that Uruguay is building along a border river
Payouts from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and a restructuring of foreign debt encouraged a fragile recovery. But the recession left many Uruguayans living in poverty and prompted thousands of younger people to leave.
Most Uruguayans are of European origin - chiefly Spanish and Italian. The country has a large middle class and is largely free of serious income inequality. But the minority who are of African or mixed European-indigenous descent form a higher proportion of its poorest people.
In the 19th century Uruguay's newly-won independence was followed by a prolonged and ruinous conflict between two political factions - the land-owning Blancos (whites) and the urban Colorados (reds).
More recently, Marxist Tupamaro urban guerrillas waged a campaign against the establishment in the 1960s and Uruguay suffered repressive military rule between 1973 and 1985.
Uruguay staged football's first World Cup in 1930, and has won the tournament twice.
Tabare Vazquez, from the Broad Front coalition, is due to step down in March 2010.
He became Uruguay's first left-wing head of state in March 2005, having defeated the ruling Colorado Party's candidate in the presidential election.
Tabare Vazquez, Uruguay's first left-wing leader
His win was part of a regional trend which had seen the emergence of left-wing governments in Brazil, Venezuela, Chile and Argentina.
Mr Vazquez, a cancer specialist and a former mayor of Montevideo, said he would pursue a moderate political course, with the emphasis on alleviating poverty.
On taking office he announced a $100m emergency plan to help the poor and promised an investigation into the disappearances of opponents of the military dictatorship in the 1970s and 1980s.
He also restored diplomatic ties with Cuba. Relations had been broken after a war of words between the Cuban leader and Mr Vazquez's predecessor, Jorge Batlle.
Public anger over the 2002 economic crisis, and disenchantment with free-market economic policies, were said to have contributed to Uruguay's dramatic political shift.
The centrist Batlle government pushed through controversial reforms, including privatisations and the outsourcing of some public services to the private sector.
The Broad Front coalition won a second mandate to govern in the October 2009 parliamentary elections. However, the coalition failed to get a clear majority for its presidential candidate in elections held on the same day. José Mujica will face a run-off in November against the conservative former president, Luis Lacalle. Mr Mujica is a senator and former leading member of the Tupamaros left-wing urban guerrillas.
Uruguayans have access to a wide range of political views via more than 100 private daily and weekly newspapers, more than 100 radio stations and some 20 television channels. Cable TV is widely available.
State-run radio and TV are operated by the official broadcasting service, SODRE. Some newspapers are owned by, or linked to, the main political parties.
Freedom of speech and media are guaranteed by the constitution, with qualifications for inciting violence or "insulting the nation".
Rights body Reporters Without Borders noted in 2008 that Uruguay was free from the "media polarisation" seen across much of the continent, scoring highly in press freedom rankings.