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 Sultanate of Oman

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    Country Name: Sultanate of Oman

    Head of State: Sultan QABOOS bin Said Al Said

    Area: 212,460㎢

    Government type: monarchy, cabinet member:

    Capital: Muscat

    National day: 18 November (Sultan QABOOS birthday 1940)

    Population: 3.7m. (July 2016)

    Population growth rate: 2.05% (2016)

    Population density: 13 p/㎢

    Language: Arabic (official), English, Baluchi, Urdu, Indian dialects

    Religion: Ibadhi Muslim (official) 75%, other (includes Sunni Muslim, Shia Muslim, Hindu) 25%

    Ethnic groups: Arab, Baluchi, South Asian (Indian, Pakistani, Sri Lankan, Bangladeshi), African

    GDP - real growth rate: 1.8% (2016)

    GDP per capita (ppp): US$43,700 (2016)

    Currency: RO=1,000baiza foreign exchange

    GDP composition by sector: agriculture: 1.7%, industry: 45.4%, services: 52.9% (2016 est.)

    Military expenditure/GDP: 12.75% (2016)

    Fiscal year: 1.1 ~ 12.31

    Life expectancy: total population: 75.5 years, male: 73.5 years, female: 77.5 years (2016 est.)

    Illiteracy: total population: 8.9%, male: 6.4%, female: 14.4% (2016 census)

 

 

  

  

   

   

 

 

CIA World Factbook

WIKIPEDIA

BBC Profile

 

The inhabitants of the area of Oman have long prospered from Indian Ocean trade. In the late 18th century, the nascent sultanate in Muscat signed the first in a series of friendship treaties with Britain. Over time, Oman's dependence on British political and military advisors increased, although the Sultanate never became a British colony. In 1970, QABOOS bin Said Al-Said overthrew his father, and has since ruled as sultan, but he has not designated a successor. His extensive modernization program has opened the country to the outside world, while preserving the longstanding close ties with the UK and US. Oman's moderate, independent foreign policy has sought to maintain good relations with its neighbors and to avoid external entanglements.

Inspired by the popular uprisings that swept the Middle East and North Africa beginning in January 2011, some Omanis staged demonstrations, calling for more jobs and economic benefits and an end to corruption. In response to those protester demands, QABOOS in 2011 pledged to implement economic and political reforms, such as granting legislative and regulatory powers to the Majlis al-Shura and increasing unemployment benefits. Additionally, in August 2012, the Sultan announced a royal directive mandating the speedy implementation of a national job creation plan for thousands of public and private sector Omani jobs. As part of the government's efforts to decentralize authority and allow greater citizen participation in local governance, Oman successfully conducted its first municipal council elections in December 2012. Announced by the Sultan in 2011, the municipal councils have the power to advise the Royal Court on the needs of local districts across Oman's 11 governorates. The Sultan returned to Oman in March 2015 after eight months in Germany, where he received medical treatment. He has since appeared publicly on a few occasions. (CIA World Factbook)

 


Source: S.M. Hong, Islamic Economy & Finance (2009),  Middle Eastern Economy (1997), Middle Eastern Economics (1991), BBC, Country Profile, CIA, The World Fact Book & WIKIPEDIA , 2017, Population Density, GeographyIQ.com  and GeographyIQ.

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