Official Name
Hellenic Republic
Capital Athens
Currencies Euro
Language(s) Greek
Population 10.6 million
GNP per head (US$) 11960
Area (square miles) 130850
Population per sq. km 81
Population per sq. mile 210


COUNTRY INFORMATION

Introduction

The southernmost country of the Balkans, Greece is surrounded by the Aegean, Ionian, and Cretan seas. Its mainly mountainous territory includes more than 2000 islands. Only one-third of the land is cultivated. There is a strong seafaring tradition, and some of the world's biggest ship-owners are Greek. Greece is rich in minerals – including chromium, whose occurrence is rare. Relations with Turkey, marked by conflict and territorial disputes, have improved in recent years. To the north, however, upheavals in Albania and the conflicts in former Yugoslavia have made for greater instability.



Climate

The climate varies from region to region. The northwest is alpine, while parts of Crete border on the subtropical. The large central plain experiences high summer temperatures. Water is a problem, since many rivers have been diverted underground by earthquakes.



People
Languages Greek, Turkish, Macedonian, Albanian
URBAN/RURAL POPULATION DIVIDE
Urban 60
% Rural 40
%

The Greeks were for many centuries a largely agrarian and seafaring nation. The German occupation during World War II, and the civil war that followed, destroyed much of the fabric of rural life and there was rapid urbanization after the 1950s. There was also extensive emigration in the 1950s and 1960s to northern Europe, Australia, the USA, Canada, and southern Africa. However, many people returned to Greece in the 1980s, putting pressure on the labor market. The socialist PASOK governments of 1981–1989 spent large sums, mostly from EU sources, on developing the infrastructure and business life of the rural regions with a view to halting emigration to the cities. The policy was mostly successful, but a majority still lives in or near the capital, Athens, and Thessaloníki in the north.

Some 98% of the population belong to the Greek Orthodox Church. Civil marriage and divorce only became legal in 1982. There are minorities of Muslims, Roman Catholics, and Jews, and a recent influx of illegal immigrants, mainly from Albania.



Economy
GNP (US$) 126269
M GNP World rank 30
 
Inflation 3 % Unemployment 11 %

Strengths

One of the major tourist destinations in Europe. Efficient agricultural exporter. Shipping: the world's largest beneficially owned fleet.

Weaknesses

High levels of public debt. Until recently, interest rates and bureaucratic banking system discouraged private initiative. State-owned sector, often poorly managed, remains large, as does the black economy.

Profile

Greece took longer than most other countries to recover from World War II. It was not until the 1960s that any substantial investment occurred. The Colonels' dictatorship curbed inflationary pressures with a wage freeze. When civilian government was restored in 1974, a spate of high wage settlements and the oil price shocks of 1973 and 1979 drove inflation over 20%. Greece's largest companies made substantial losses, until the socialists' controversial austerity program of 1986–1987 reined in labor costs.

Greece was the only EU country seeking to introduce the euro in 1999 which failed to meet the economic convergence criteria. It then tackled the problems with determination, balancing the budget and bringing inflation under control, although public-sector debt remains high. In January 2001 Greece became the 12th member of the eurozone, and fully adopted the currency in 2002. Unemployment is still high and GDP per capita is the lowest in the EU.



Politics
Lower house Last election 2000 Next election 2004
Upper house Last election Not applicable Next election Not applicable

Greece is a multiparty democracy. A military government was in power between 1967 and 1974.

Profile

Although PASOK has held power continuously since 1993, its economic policies differ little from the previous conservative government. Kostas Simitis has led the party since the resignation and death in 1996 of its founder Andreas Papandreou. PASOK only narrowly won the April 2000 election.

Main Political Issues

Closer European union

Greece joined the eurozone in 2001, but only after stringent austerity policies, which evoked widespread protests. Greece favors EU enlargement, and backs EU membership for the Greek part of Cyprus, to the annoyance of Turkey. Currently the poorest EU country, Greece could lose funding to new members, especially if Turkey joins.

Relations with Macedonia

In 1995, Greece finally recognized the sovereignty of the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia. The crisis in Macedonia in 2001 over ethnic Albanian separatism increased Greek regional security concerns.

Albanian refugees

Thousands of Albanians of Greek descent entered Greece illegally after 1990. Willing to work for very low wages, they swelled Greece's thriving black economy. A 1998 legalization program resulted in the registration of 375,000 Albanians.



Resources
Minerals Oil, gas, coal, iron, bauxite, marble, nickel, magnesite, chromium
Oil reserves (barrels) 15m barrels Oil production (barrels/day) 5875 b/d

Greece has an oil and gas field off the coast of Thasos island. There may also be exploitable reserves in eastern waters, ownership of which is contested by Turkey. Coal, iron, and other mining contributes less than 2% to GDP. Greece is a leading producer of marble.



Health
Life expectancy 78 Life expect. World rank 17
Population per doctor 244 Infant mortality (per 1000 births) 5
Expend. % GDP 5 %
Principal causes of death Cerebrovascular and heart diseases, cancers, accidents

The socialists (PASOK) introduced a national health service and a national pharmaceuticals industry. Some 12% of government expenditure goes on health, and every Greek is entitled to sickness benefit. Greece now has the third-highest number of doctors per head of population in the EU; however, primary care is poor, as is that in state hospitals. In the early 1990s the ND attempted to upgrade private medicine and to incorporate its activities with those in state hospitals. Many Greeks needing major surgery go abroad for treatment.



Education
Literacy 97 % Expend. % GNP 3

%

PERCENTAGE OF POPULATION IN FULL TIME EDUCATION
Primary 97 % Secondary 96 % Tertiary 50 %

Some 9% of total government spending is on education, which is free and officially compulsory for nine years. Teachers are poorly paid and qualifications are low. University places are limited and many students go abroad for tertiary education. Technical courses, funded by the EU, have increased since the 1990s.



Wealth
Cars 254 per 1,000 population
Telephones 532 per 1,000 population
Televisions 488 per 1,000 population

Greek society changed dramatically in the postwar period. Formerly a largely agricultural society living in isolated communities, it was rapidly urbanized in the 1950s. Former agricultural workers made fortunes, many by grabbing opportunities presented by the shipping industry. Among these were the now prominent Niarchos and Onassis families.

The advent of the republic in 1973 reflected the social changes which had occurred since the war. New wealth and success became more admired than aristocratic birth or prestige. Greece is now a socially mobile society. Living standards have improved universally since the 1950s.



History

Greece was occupied by Nazi Germany between 1941 and 1944. After liberation by the Allies, communists and royalists fought a five-year civil war. This ended with communist defeat, and King Paul became the constitutional monarch.

  • 1964 King Constantine succeeds his father, King Paul.
  • 1967 Military coup. King in exile. Col. Giorgios Papadopoulos premier.
  • 1973 Greece declared a republic, with Papadopoulos as president. Papadopoulos overthrown in military coup. Lt. Gen. Ghizikis becomes president. Adamantios Androutsopoulos prime minister.
  • 1974 Greece leaves NATO in protest at Turkish occupation of northern Cyprus. "Colonels' regime" falls. Constantinos Karamanlis becomes premier and his ND party wins subsequent elections.
  • 1975 Konstantinos Tsatsou becomes president.
  • 1977 Elections: ND reelected.
  • 1980 Karamanlis president. Georgios Rallis prime minister. Greece rejoins NATO.
  • 1981 PASOK wins elections. Andreas Papandreou first socialist premier. Greece joins European Communities.
  • 1985 Proposals to limit power of president. Karamanlis resigns. Christos Sartzetakis president. Greece and Albania reopen borders, closed since 1940.
  • 1985–1989 Civil unrest caused by economic austerity program.
  • 1988 Cabinet implicated in financial scandal. Leading members resign.
  • 1989 Defense agreement with USA. Two inconclusive elections lead to eventual formation of all-party coalition.
  • 1990 Coalition government collapses. ND wins elections. Konstantinos Mitsotakis prime minister; Karamanlis president.
  • 1992 EU persuaded to withhold recognition of Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (FYRM).
  • 1993 PASOK wins election, Andreas Papandreou premier.
  • 1995 Kostas Stephanopoulos elected president; recognition of sovereignty of FYRM.
  • 1996 Andreas Papandreou resigns as prime minister; succeeded by Kostas Simitis.
  • 1999 Earthquakes in Greece and Turkey. Sympathetic response shows improvement in relations.
  • 2001 Armed conflict in Macedonia.
  • 2002 Euro fully adopted.