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| REPUBLIC OF TURKEY |
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| General Information |
| Total Land Area: |
769,630 km2 |
| Land boundaries: |
2,875 km |
| Coastline: |
8,333 km |
| Capital: |
Ankara |
| Other Large Cities: |
Istanbul, Izmir, Adana |
| Official Language: |
Turkish |
| National Currency Unit: |
Turkish Lira (TRL) |
| National Day: |
October 29 |
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| Location and Geography |
Turkey is the largest country in Europe (aside from Russia). It is bordered by Georgia, Armenia, Azerbaijan and Iran in the East, Iraq, Syria and the Mediterranean Sea in the South, Greece and Bulgaria in the North-west, the Black Sea in the North, and the Aegean Sea in the West. Marmara is an inland sea that separates Europe and Asia by two natural passages: Dardanel and Bosphorus. The land in Europe is called Trakya. Anatolia, which is the land area located in Asia, is a high plateau bounded by the Pontic Mountains in the North, the Taurus Mountains in the South, and stretching out to the peak of Mount Ararat in the Caucasus Mountains in the East. Mountain ranges give way to narrow coastal plains in the North-east and South, and to treeless valleys between rolling hills and low mountains in the centre. The climate varies considerably across Turkey from North to South and West to East. It is mild on the Black Sea coast, warm on the Aegean and Mediterranean coasts, and cold and dry in the inland.
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| Demography |
| Population: |
72.219.794 million (2004) |
| Crude Birth Rate: |
21 per thousand people (2003) |
| Crude Death Rate: |
7 per thousand people (2003) |
| Infant Mortality Rate: |
38 per thousand (2003) |
| Life Expectancy: |
Male: 69 years, Female: 74 years (2004) |
| Urban Population: |
67.0 percent (2003) |
| Adult Literacy: |
88.30 percent (2003) |
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| Economy |
Turkey has a dynamic economy that is a complex mix of modern industry and commerce along with traditional crafts and agriculture. Some of its main natural resources are antimony, coal, chromium, bauxite, mercury, copper, iron ore, borate and sulphur. It has a strong industrial base in textiles and food processing. Cotton production is a major input of the textile sector. Telecommunications, automotive and tourism are the fastest growing sectors in Turkey. A large arable area and a variety of climates enable the production of a diversity of crops. Turkey is also a major agricultural producer and among the world’s eight food self-sufficient countries. It also ranks as the fifth and ninth, respectively, in terms of the world’s vegetable and fruit production. It is the largest cotton, tea and tobacco producer in Europe.
| GDP at Current Market Prices: |
301999.46 million US$ (2004) |
| Per Capita GDP: |
1062.09 US$ (2004) |
| Share of Sectors in GDP: |
11.24% Agriculture, 23.9% Industry, 65.0% Services, (2004) |
| Total Exports: |
87228.99 million US$ (2004) |
| Total Imports: |
104731.82 million US$ (2004) |
| Major Exports Items: |
Textiles and apparel, foodstuffs, iron and steel products |
| Major Imports Items: |
Minerals, machinery and transportation equipment, fuels |
| Major Trading Partners: |
Germany, US, Italy, France, UK and Russia |
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| External Links |
Presidency
Prime Ministry
Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Ministry of Finance
Ministry of Internal Affairs
Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs
State Planning Organization
Undersecretariat of the Prime Ministry for Foreign Trade
Ministry of Industry and Trade
Ministry of Education
Ministry of Health
State Institute of Statistics
Central Bank of Turkey |
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