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Economy of NorwayEconomy - overview: The Norwegian economy is a prosperous bastion of welfare capitalism[?], featuring a combination of free market activity and government intervention. The government controls key areas, such as the vital petroleum sector (through large-scale state enterprises), and extensively subsidizes agriculture, fishing, and areas with sparse resources. The extensive welfare system helps propel public sector expenditures to more than 50% of GDP. A major shipping nation, with a high dependence on international trade, Norway is basically an exporter of raw materials and semiprocessed goods. The country is richly endowed with natural resources - petroleum, hydropower, fish, forests, and minerals - and is highly dependent on its oil production and international oil prices. Only Saudi Arabia exports more oil than Norway. Norway imports more than half its food needs. Norway opted to stay out of the European Union after referendums in September 1972 and November 1994. Growth was a meager 0.8% in 1999 because of weak private consumption and anemic investment activity in the oil and other sectors. Growth should pick up in 2000, perhaps to 2.7%. Despite their high per capita income and generous welfare benefits, Norwegians worry about that time in the next two decades when the oil and gas begin to run out.Norway is one of the world's richest countries in per capita terms. It has an important stake in promoting a liberal environment for foreign trade. Its large shipping fleet is one of the most modern among maritime nations. Metals, pulp and paper products, chemicals, shipbuilding, and fishing are the most significant traditional industries. Norway's emergence as a major oil and gas producer in the mid-1970s transformed the economy. Large sums of investment capital poured into the offshore oil sector, leading to greater increases in Norwegian production costs and wages than in the rest of western Europe up to the time of the global recovery of the mid-1980s. The influx of oil revenue also permitted Norway to expand an already extensive social welfare system. Norway has established a state Petroleum Fund[?] which reached $67 billion at the end of 2001. The fund primarily will be used to help finance government programs once oil and gas resources become depleted. Norway is currently enjoying large foreign trade surpluses thanks to high oil prices. Unemployment remains currently low (3%-4% range), and the prospects for economic growth are encouraging thanks to the government's stimulative fiscal policy and economic recovery in the United States and Europe. Norway voted against joining the European Union (EU) in a 1994 referendum. With the exception of the agricultural and fisheries sectors, however, Norway enjoys free trade with the EU under the framework of the European Economic Area. This agreement aims to apply the four freedoms of the EU's internal market (goods, persons, services, and capital) to Norway. As a result, Norway normally adopts and implements most EU directives. Norwegian monetary policy is aimed at maintaining a stable exchange rate for the krone against European currencies, of which the "Euro" is a key operating parameter. Norway isn't a member of the EU's Economic and Monetary Union and doesn't have a fixed exchange rate. Its principle trading partners are in the EU; the United States ranks sixth.
Energy Resources Norway is the world's third-largest oil exporter and provides much of western Europe's crude oil and gas requirements. In 2001, Norwegian oil and gas exports accounted for 57% of total merchandise exports. In addition, offshore exploration and production have stimulated onshore economic activities. Foreign companies, including many American ones, participate actively in the petroleum sector. The Norwegian telephone system has been privatised, and the largest telecommunications company (formerly government owned) is now known as Telenor.
GDP: purchasing power parity - $143 billion (2002 est.) GDP - real growth rate: 1.6% (2002 est.) GDP - per capita: purchasing power parity - $31,800 (2002 est.) GDP - composition by sector:
Population below poverty line: NA% Household income or consumption by percentage share:
Inflation rate (consumer prices): 2.8% (1999 est.) Labor force: 2.7 million (1999 est.) Labor force - by occupation: services 74%, industry 22%, agriculture, forestry, and fishing 4% (1995) Unemployment rate: 3.9% (2002 est.) Budget:
Industries: petroleum and gas, food processing, shipbuilding[?], pulp and paper products, metals, chemical, timber, mining, textiles, fishing Industrial production growth rate: 0.7% (1999 est.) Electricity - production: 115.485 billion kWh (1998) Electricity - production by source:
Electricity - consumption: 111.001 TWh (1998) Electricity - exports: 4.4 TWh (1998) Electricity - imports: 8 TWh (1998) Agriculture - products: barley, other grains, potatoes; beef, milk; fish Exports: $47.3 billion (f.o.b., 1999 est.) Exports - commodities: petroleum and petroleum products, machinery and equipment, metals, chemicals, ships, fish Exports - partners: European Union 77% (United Kingdom 17%, Germany 12%, Netherlands 10%, Sweden 10%, France 8%), United States 7% (1998) Imports: $38.6 billion (f.o.b., 1999 est.) Imports - commodities: machinery and equipment, chemicals, metals, foodstuffs Imports - partners: European Union 69% (Sweden 15%, Germany 14%, United Kingdom 10%, Denmark 7%), United States 7%, Japan 4% (1998) Debt - external: $0 (Norway is a net external creditor) Economic aid - donor: ODA, $1.4 billion (1998) Currency: 1 Norwegian Krone (NOK) = 100 oere Exchange rates: Norwegian kroner (NKr) per US$1 - 8.0129 (January 2000), 7.7992 (1999), 7.5451 (1998), 7.0734 (1997), 6.4498 (1996), 6.3352 (1995) Fiscal year: calendar year The younger will play.html">play the heroes; the
sweet. And in ten years from now I will send them back to you
Ah, madame. What must be done so as not to separate from them?
SIGNORA FANTASTICI:
may be, but I insist that the rights of poetry.html">poetry.html">poetry.html">poetry be respected in me. Too
What! Madame? I cannot order my dinner in prose.html">prose from Madame de
Poetry doesn't consist only of verse, but in love for the arts, in
proscribes all manner of sentiments, vulgarity, undemocratic ideas
I am going to give a party to a charming woman.html">woman that illness keeps at
that's poetry for heaven's sake, true poetry. Would you play a role in
What are you thinking of, Madame, me?
SIGNORA FANTASTICI:
A siege! And do you think my gout will prevent me from rising to the
We will take care that the ramparts will be easy to approach.
MR. DE KRIEGSCHENMAHL:
Without a doubt.
MR. DE KRIEGSCHENMAHL:
You see plainly that acting repairs the faults of destiny. And you,
of a respectable woman.
MADAME DE KRIEGSCHENMAHL:
Excuse me, I thought--
MADAME DE KRIEGSCHENMAHL:
Well! Madame. Play the great flirts. I abdicate and I give them to
What now, Madame De Kriegschenmahl?
MADAME DE KRIEGSCHENMAHL:
on the stage. Everywhere else--you know me.
SIGNORA FANTASTICI:
suitably, the triumph of poetry over prose.
CURTAIN
End of this Project Gutenberg Etext of Signora Fantastici by Madame. All is still licensed under the GNU FDL.
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