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Bolivia

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Bolivian flag

Bolivia is located in Central South America, southwest of Brazil.

Bolivia has borders with Argentina for 832km, Brazil for 3400km, Chile for 861km, Peru for 900km and Paraguay for 750km.

Land in Bolivia is rugged Andes Mountains with a highland plateau (Altiplano), hills, lowland plains of the Amazon Basin.

Bolivian land covers an area of 1098580 square kilometers which is slightly less than three times the size of Montana

As for the Bolivian climate; varies with altitude; humid and tropical to cold and semiarid.

Bolivian(s) speak Spanish (official), Quechua (official), Aymara (official).

Bolivia country profile

Bolivian Map
Places of note in Bolivia
Santa Cruz de la Sierra
Cochabamba
La Paz
Sucre
Oruro
Tarija
Potosí
Montero
Trinidad
Yacuiba
Riberalta
Guayaramerín
Villazón
Llallagua
Camiri
Cobija
San Ignacio de Velasco
Tupiza
Warnes
San Borja
Villamontes
Cotoca
Villa Yapacaní
Santiago del Torno
Huanuni
Punata
Ascensión
Mineros
Patacamaya
Rurrenabaque
Portachuelo
Puerto Quijarro
Uyuni
Roboré
Pailón
Regions of Bolivia
Bolivia (general)
Chuquisaca
Cochabamba
El Beni
La Paz
Oruro
Pando
Potosí
Santa Cruz
Tarija

Bolivia, named after independence fighter Simon BOLIVAR, broke away from Spanish rule in 1825; much of its subsequent history has consisted of a series of nearly 200 coups and countercoups. Comparatively democratic civilian rule was established in 1982, but leaders have faced difficult problems of deep-seated poverty, social unrest, and illegal drug production. In December 2005, Bolivians elected Movement Toward Socialism leader Evo MORALES president - by the widest margin of any leader since the restoration of civilian rule in 1982 - after he ran on a promise to change the country's traditional political class and empower the nation's poor majority.


Bolivia Country Profile

Bolivia, long one of the poorest and least developed Latin American countries, reformed its economy after suffering a disastrous economic crisis in the early 1980s. The reforms spurred real GDP growth, which averaged 4% in the 1990s, and poverty rates fell. Economic growth, however, lagged again beginning in 1999 because of a global slowdown and homegrown factors such as political turmoil, civil unrest, and soaring fiscal deficits, all of which hurt investor confidence. In 2003, violent protests against the pro-foreign investment economic policies of President SANCHEZ DE LOZADA led to his resignation and the cancellation of plans to export Bolivia's newly discovered natural gas reserves to large northern hemisphere markets. In 2005, the government passed a controversial natural gas law that imposes on the oil and gas firms significantly higher taxes as well as new contracts that give the state control of their operations. Bolivian officials are in the process of implementing the law; meanwhile, foreign investors have stopped investing and have taken the first legal steps to secure their investments. Real GDP growth in 2003-05 - helped by increased demand for natural gas in neighboring Brazil - was positive, but still below the levels seen during the 1990s. Bolivia's fiscal position has improved in recent years, but the country remains dependent on foreign aid from multilateral lenders and foreign governments to meet budget shortfalls. In 2005, the G8 announced a $2 billion debt-forgiveness plan over the next few decades that should help reduce some fiscal pressures on the government in the near term.

Bolivian natural resources include tin, natural gas, petroleum, zinc, tungsten, antimony, silver, iron, lead, gold, timber, hydropower

landlocked; shares control of Lago Titicaca, world's highest navigable lake (elevation 3,805 m), with Peru

Bolivian religion is Roman Catholic 95%, Protestant (Evangelical Methodist) 5%.

Natural hazards in Bolivia include flooding in the northeast (March-April).





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