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Экономика Анголы

Экономика Анголы
Луанда , финансовый центр Анголы
Валюта Анголан первый (AOA, KZ)
Календарный год
Торговые организации
AU , AFCFTA (подписано), Африканский банк развития , SADC , ECCAS , World Bank , IMF , WTO , группа 77 , OPEC
Страновая группа
Статистика
PopulationУвеличивать 30,809,762 (2018)[3]
GDP
  • Увеличивать $135.558 billion (nominal, 2023 est.)[4]
  • Увеличивать $262.898 billion (PPP, 2023 est.)[4]
GDP rank
GDP growth
  • −2.0% (2018) −0.9% (2019e)
  • −4.0% (2020f) 3.1% (2021f)[5]
GDP per capita
  • Увеличивать $4,197.713 (nominal, 2023 est.)[4]
  • Увеличивать $7,753.101 (PPP, 2023 est.)[4]
GDP per capita rank
GDP by sector
11.75% (2023 est.)[4]
Population below poverty line
  • 36.6% (2008 est.)[7]
  • 69.8% on less than $3.20/day (2018)[8]
51.3 high (2018)[9]
Labour force
  • Увеличивать 13,183,538 (2019)[12]
  • 40.0% employment rate (2014)[13]
Labour force by occupation
  • agriculture: 85%
  • industry: 15% (2015 est.)
  • industry and services: 15% (2003 est.)[6]
Unemployment6.6% (2016 est.)[6]
Main industries
petroleum; diamonds, iron ore, phosphates, feldspar, bauxite, uranium, and gold; cement; basic metal products; fish processing; food processing, brewing, tobacco products, sugar; textiles; ship repair
External
ExportsУвеличивать $29.84 billion (2021 est.)[14]
Export goods
crude oil, diamonds, refined petroleum products, coffee, sisal, fish and fish products, timber, cotton
Main export partners
ImportsУвеличивать $10.92 billion (2021 est.)[16]
Import goods
machinery and electrical equipment, vehicles and spare parts; medicines, food, textiles, military goods
Main import partners
FDI stock
  • Увеличивать $11.21 billion (December 31, 2017, est.)[6]
  • Увеличивать Abroad: $28 billion (December 31, 2017, est.)[6]
Увеличивать −$1.254 billion (2017 est.)[6]
Негативное увеличение $42.08 billion (December 31, 2017, est.)[6]
Public finances
Положительное снижение 65% of GDP (2017 est.)[6]
−6.7% (of GDP) (2017 est.)[6]
Revenues26.1 billion (2023 est.)
Expenses23.98 billion (2023 est.)
Economic aid$383.5 million (1999 est.)
Снижаться $17.29 billion (December 31, 2017, est.)[6]
All values, unless otherwise stated, are in US dollars.
Change in per capita GDP of Angola, 1950–2018. Figures are inflation-adjusted to 2011 International dollars.

Экономика Анголы по -прежнему сильно влияет на последствия четырех десятилетий конфликта в последней части 20 -го века, войны за независимость от Португалии (1961–75) и последующей гражданской войны (1975–2002) . Бедность с 2002 года снижается более 50%, а треть населения опирается на натуральное сельское хозяйство . С 2002 года, когда 27-летняя гражданская война закончилась, правительственная политика отдавала приоритет ремонту и улучшению инфраструктуры и укреплению политических и социальных институтов. В течение первого десятилетия 21-го века экономика Анголы была одной из самых быстрорастущих в мире, [ 18 ] с сообщением о среднегодовом росте ВВП на 11,1 процента с 2001 по 2010 год. [ 19 ] Высокие международные цены на нефть и рост добычи нефти способствовали значительному экономическому росту, хотя и с высоким неравенством в то время. Исключение торговли 2022 года составило 30 миллиардов долларов по сравнению с 48 миллиардами долларов в 2012 году. [ 20 ]

Коррупция распространена на всей территории экономики [ 21 ] [ 22 ] и страна по -прежнему сильно зависит от нефтяного сектора, который в 2017 году составлял более 90 процентов экспорта по стоимости и 64 процента государственных доходов. [23] With the end of the oil boom, from 2015 Angola entered into a period of economic contraction.[24][25]

History

[edit]

The Angolan economy has been dominated by the production of raw materials and the use of cheap labor since European rule began in the sixteenth century.[26] The Portuguese used Angola principally as a source for the thriving slave trade across the Atlantic; Luanda became the greatest slaving port in Africa.[26] After the Portuguese Empire abolished the slave trade in Angola in 1858, it began using concessional agreements, granting exclusive rights to a private company to exploit land, people, and all other resources within a given territory.[26] In Mozambique, this policy spawned a number of companies notorious for their exploitation of local labor.[26] But in Angola, only Diamang showed even moderate success.[26] At the same time, Portuguese began emigrating to Angola to establish farms and plantations (fazendas) to grow cash crops for export.[26] Although these farms were only partially successful before World War II, they formed the basis for the later economic growth.[26]

The principal exports of the post-slave economy in the 19th century were rubber, beeswax, and ivory.[27] Prior to the First World War, exportation of coffee, palm kernels and oil, cattle, leather and hides, and salt fish joined the principal exports, with small quantities of gold and cotton also being produced.[28] Grains, sugar, and rum were also produced for local consumption.[29] The principal imports were foodstuffs, cotton goods, hardware, and British coal.[29] Legislation against foreign traders was implemented in the 1890s. The territory's prosperity, however, continued to depend on plantations worked by labor "indentured" from the interior.[30]

Before World War II, the Portuguese government was concerned primarily with keeping its colonies self-sufficient and therefore invested little capital in Angola's local economy.[26] It built no roads until the mid-1920s, and the first railroad, the Benguela railway, was not completed until 1929.[26] Between 1900 and 1940, only 35,000 Portuguese emigrants settled in Angola, and most worked in commerce in the cities, facilitating trade with Portugal.[26] In the rural areas, Portuguese settlers often found it difficult to make a living because of fluctuating world prices for sugarcane and sisal and the difficulties in obtaining cheap labor to farm their crops.[26] As a result, they often suspended their operations until the market prices rose and instead marketed the produce of Angolan farmers.[26]

But in the wake of World War II, the rapid growth of industrialization worldwide and the parallel requirements for raw materials led Portugal to develop closer ties with its colonies and to begin actively developing the Angolan economy.[26] In the 1930s, Portugal started to develop closer trade ties with its colonies, and by 1940 it absorbed 63 percent of Angolan exports and accounted for 47 percent of Angolan imports, up from 39 percent and 37 percent, respectively, a decade earlier.[26] When the price of Angola's principal crops—coffee and sisal—jumped after the war, the Portuguese government began to reinvest some profits inside the country, initiating a series of projects to develop infrastructure.[26] During the 1950s, Portugal built dams, hydroelectric power stations, and transportation systems.[26] In addition, Portuguese citizens were encouraged to emigrate to Angola, where planned settlements (colonatos) were established for them in the rural areas.[26] Finally, the Portuguese initiated mining operations for iron ore, manganese, and copper to complement industrial activities at home, and in 1955 the first successful oil wells were drilled in Angola.[26] By 1960 the Angolan economy had been completely transformed, boasting a successful commercial agricultural sector, a promising mineral and petroleum production enterprise, and an incipient manufacturing industry.[26]

Yet by 1976, these encouraging developments had been reversed.[26] The economy was in complete disarray in the aftermath of the war of independence and the subsequent internal fighting of the liberation movements.[26] According to the ruling MPLA-PT, in August 1976 more than 80 percent of the agricultural plantations had been abandoned by their Portuguese owners; only 284 out of 692 factories continued to operate; more than 30,000 medium-level and high-level managers, technicians, and skilled workers had left the country; and 2,500 enterprises had been closed (75 percent of which had been abandoned by their owners).[26] Furthermore, only 8,000 vehicles remained out of 153,000 registered, dozens of bridges had been destroyed, the trading network was disrupted, administrative services did not exist, and files and studies were missing.[26]

Angola's economic ills can also be traced to the legacy of Portuguese colonial development.[26] Many of the white settlers had come to Angola after 1950 and were understandably quick to repatriate during the war of independence.[26] During their stay, however, these settlers had appropriated Angolan lands, disrupting local peasant production of cash and subsistence crops.[26] Moreover, Angola's industries depended on trade with Portugal—the colony's overwhelmingly dominant trade partner—for both markets and machinery.[26] Only the petroleum and diamond industries boasted a wider clientele for investment and markets.[26] Most important, the Portuguese had not trained Angolans to operate the larger industrial or agricultural enterprises, nor had they actively educated the population.[26] Upon independence Angola thus found itself without markets or expertise to maintain even minimal economic growth.[26]

As a result, the government intervened, nationalizing most businesses and farms abandoned by the Portuguese.[26] It established state farms to continue producing coffee, sugar, and sisal, and it took over the operations of all factories to maintain production.[26] These attempts usually failed, primarily because of the lack of experienced managers and the continuing disruptions in rural areas caused by the UNITA insurgency.[26] Only the petroleum sector continued to operate successfully, and by 1980 this sector had helped the gross domestic product reach US$3.6 billion, its highest level up to 1988.[26] In the face of serious economic problems and the continuing war throughout the countryside, in 1987 the government announced plans to liberalize economic policies and promote private investment and involvement in the economy.[26]

1990s

[edit]

United Nations Angola Verification Mission III and MONUA spent US$1.5 billion overseeing implementation of the Lusaka Protocol, a 1994 peace accord that ultimately failed to end the civil war. The protocol prohibited UNITA from buying foreign arms, a provision the United Nations largely did not enforce, so both sides continued to build up their stockpile. UNITA purchased weapons in 1996 and 1997 from private sources in Albania and Bulgaria, and from Zaire, South Africa, Republic of the Congo, Zambia, Togo, and Burkina Faso. In October 1997 the UN imposed travel sanctions on UNITA leaders, but the UN waited until July 1998 to limit UNITA's exportation of diamonds and freeze UNITA bank accounts. While the U.S. government gave US$250 million to UNITA between 1986 and 1991, UNITA made US$1.72 billion between 1994 and 1999 exporting diamonds, primarily through Zaire to Europe. At the same time the Angolan government received large amounts of weapons from the governments of Belarus, Brazil, Bulgaria, China, and South Africa. While no arms shipment to the government violated the protocol, no country informed the U.N. Register on Conventional Weapons as required.[31]

Despite the increase in civil warfare in late 1998, the economy grew by an estimated 4% in 1999. The government introduced new currency denominations in 1999, including a 1 and 5 kwanza note."Central Bank governor explains arrangements for new currency". BBC Selected Transcripts: Africa. November 1, 1999. Retrieved October 10, 2017.

2000s

[edit]

An economic reform effort was launched in 1998.[citation needed] Angola ranked 160 of 174 nations in the United Nations Human Development Index in 2000.[18] In April 2000 Angola started an International Monetary Fund (IMF) Staff-Monitored Program (SMP). The program formally lapsed in June 2001, but the IMF remains engaged. In this context the Government of Angola has succeeded in unifying exchange rates and has raised fuel, electricity, and water rates. The Commercial Code, telecommunications law, and Foreign Investment Code are being modernized. A privatization effort, prepared with World Bank assistance, has begun with the BCI bank. Nevertheless, a legacy of fiscal mismanagement and corruption persists.[citation needed] The civil war internally displaced 3.8 million people, 32% of the population, by 2001.[18] The security brought about by the 2002 peace settlement has led to the resettlement of 4 million displaced persons, thus resulting in large-scale increases in agriculture production.[citation needed]

Angola produced over 3 million carats (600 kilograms) of diamonds in 2003,[32] and production was expected to grow to 10 million carats (2,000 kilograms) per year by 2007. In 2004, China's Eximbank approved a $2 billion line of credit to Angola to rebuild infrastructure. The economy grew 18% in 2005 and growth was expected to reach 26% in 2006 and stay above 10% for the rest of the decade.[33] By 2020, Angola had a national debt of $76 billion, of which $20 billion is to China.[34]

The construction industry is taking advantage of the growing economy, with various housing projects stimulated by the government such as the Angola Investe program and the Casa Feliz or Meña projects. Not all public construction projects are functional. For example, Kilamba Kiaxi, where a whole new satellite town of Luanda, consisting of housing facilities for several hundreds of thousands of people, was completely uninhabited for over four years because of skyrocketing prices, but completely sold out after the government decreased the original price and created mortgage plans at around the election time and thus made it affordable for middle-class people. ChevronTexaco started pumping 50 kbbl/d (7.9×10^3 m3/d) from Block 14 in January 2000, but production decreased to 57 kbbl/d (9.1×10^3 m3/d) in 2007 due to poor-quality oil.[35] Angola joined the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries on January 1, 2007.[35] Cabinda Gulf Oil Company found Malange-1, an oil reservoir in Block 14, on August 9, 2007.[36]

Overview

[edit]

Despite its abundant natural resources, output per capita is among the world's lowest. Subsistence agriculture provides the main livelihood for 85% of the population. Oil production and the supporting activities are vital to the economy, contributing about 45% to GDP and 90% of exports. Growth is almost entirely driven by rising oil production which surpassed 1.4 million barrels per day (220×10^3 m3/d) in late-2005 and which is expected to grow to 2 million barrels per day (320×10^3 m3/d) by 2007. Control of the oil industry is consolidated in Sonangol Group, a conglomerate owned by the Angolan government. With revenues booming from oil exports, the government has started to implement ambitious development programs to build roads and other basic infrastructure for the nation.[citation needed]

In the last decade of the colonial period, Angola was a major African food exporter but now imports almost all its food. Severe wartime conditions, including extensive planting of landmines throughout the countryside, have brought agricultural activities to a near-standstill. Some efforts to recover have gone forward, however, notably in fisheries. Coffee production, though a fraction of its pre-1975 level, is sufficient for domestic needs and some exports. Expanding oil production is now almost half of GDP and 90% of exports, at 800 thousand barrels per day (130×10^3 m3/d). Diamonds provided much of the revenue for Jonas Savimbi's UNITA rebellion through illicit trade. Other rich resources await development: gold, forest products, fisheries, iron ore, coffee, and fruits.[37]

This is a chart of trend of nominal gross domestic product of Angola at market prices using International Monetary Fund data;[38] figures are in millions of units.

Year Gross Domestic Product (*$1,000,000) US Dollar Exchange Per Capita Income
(as % of USA)
1980 6.33
1985 4.46
1990 4.42
1995 5,066 14 Angolan Kwanza 1.58
2000 9,135 91,666 Angolan Kwanza 1.96
2005 28,860 2,515,452 Angolan Kwanza 4.73

The following table shows the main economic indicators in 1980–2023. Inflation below 5% is in green.[39]

Year GDP
(in bn. US$ PPP)
GDP per capita
(in US$ PPP)
GDP

(in bn. US$ nominal)

GDP growth
(real)
Inflation rate
(in Percent)
Government debt
(in % of GDP)
1980 10.9 1,317 6.6 Увеличивать2.4% Негативное увеличение46.7% n/a
1981 Увеличивать11.4 Увеличивать1,341 Снижаться6.2 Снижаться−4.4% Увеличивать1.3% n/a
1982 Увеличивать12.1 Увеличивать1,388 6.2 Устойчивый0.0% Увеличивать1.8% n/a
1983 Увеличивать13.1 Увеличивать1,464 Увеличивать6.5 Увеличивать4.2% Увеличивать1.8% n/a
1984 Увеличивать14.4 Увеличивать1,567 Увеличивать6.9 Увеличивать6.0% Увеличивать1.8% n/a
1985 Увеличивать15.4 Снижаться1,484 Увеличивать8.5 Увеличивать3.5% Увеличивать1.8% n/a
1986 Увеличивать16.1 Увеличивать1,515 Снижаться7.9 Увеличивать2.9% Увеличивать1.8% n/a
1987 Увеличивать17.2 Увеличивать1,576 Увеличивать9.1 Увеличивать4.1% Увеличивать1.8% n/a
1988 Увеличивать18.9 Увеличивать1,685 Увеличивать9.8 Увеличивать6.1% Увеличивать1.8% n/a
1989 Увеличивать19.6 Увеличивать1,705 Увеличивать11.4 Устойчивый0.0% Увеличивать1.8% n/a
1990 Увеличивать19.7 Снижаться1,664 Увеличивать12.6 Снижаться−3.5% Увеличивать1.8% n/a
1991 Увеличивать22.8 Увеличивать1,865 Снижаться12.2 Увеличивать1.0% Негативное увеличение85.3% n/a
1992 Увеличивать26.0 Увеличивать2,057 Снижаться9.4 Увеличивать11.4% Негативное увеличение299.1% n/a
1993 Увеличивать29.6 Увеличивать2,067 Снижаться6.8 Увеличивать10.7% Негативное увеличение1,379.5% n/a
1994 Увеличивать33.3 Увеличивать2,475 Снижаться5.0 Увеличивать10.5% Негативное увеличение949.8% n/a
1995 Увеличивать37.5 Увеличивать2,698 Увеличивать6.2 Увеличивать10.4% Негативное увеличение2,672.2% n/a
1996 Увеличивать42.5 Увеличивать2,955 Увеличивать8.0 Увеличивать11.2% Негативное увеличение4,146.0% n/a
1997 Увеличивать46.4 Увеличивать3,120 Увеличивать9.4 Увеличивать7.3% Негативное увеличение221.9% n/a
1998 Увеличивать49.1 Увеличивать3,196 Снижаться8.0 Увеличивать4.7% Негативное увеличение107.4% n/a
1999 Увеличивать50.9 Увеличивать3,207 Снижаться7.5 Увеличивать2.2% Негативное увеличение248.2% n/a
2000 Увеличивать53.6 Увеличивать3,272 Увеличивать11.2 Увеличивать3.1% Негативное увеличение325.0% 133.9%
2001 Увеличивать57.2 Увеличивать3,373 Снижаться10.9 Увеличивать4.2% Негативное увеличение152.6% Положительное снижение133.5%
2002 Увеличивать66.0 Увеличивать3,766 Увеличивать15.3 Увеличивать13.7% Негативное увеличение108.9% Положительное снижение73.7%
2003 Увеличивать69.3 Увеличивать3,823 Увеличивать17.8 Увеличивать3.0% Негативное увеличение98.2% Положительное снижение58.0%
2004 Увеличивать78.9 Увеличивать4,205 Увеличивать23.6 Увеличивать11.0% Негативное увеличение43.5% Положительное снижение47.7%
2005 Увеличивать93.7 Увеличивать4,815 Увеличивать37.0 Увеличивать15.0% Негативное увеличение23.0% Положительное снижение33.5%
2006 Увеличивать107.7 Увеличивать5,341 Увеличивать52.4 Увеличивать11.5% Негативное увеличение13.3% Положительное снижение18.7%
2007 Увеличивать126.1 Увеличивать6,030 Увеличивать65.3 Увеличивать14.0% Негативное увеличение12.2% Негативное увеличение21.0%
2008 Увеличивать142.9 Увеличивать6,586 Увеличивать88.5 Увеличивать11.2% Негативное увеличение12.5% Негативное увеличение31.4%
2009 Увеличивать145.0 Снижаться6,443 Снижаться70.3 Увеличивать0.9% Негативное увеличение13.7% Негативное увеличение56.2%
2010 Увеличивать153.9 Увеличивать6,586 Увеличивать83.8 Увеличивать4.9% Негативное увеличение14.5% Положительное снижение37.2%
2011 Увеличивать162.5 Увеличивать6,700 Увеличивать111.8 Увеличивать3.5% Негативное увеличение13.5% Положительное снижение29.6%
2012 Увеличивать186.1 Увеличивать7,389 Увеличивать128.1 Увеличивать8.5% Негативное увеличение10.3% Положительное снижение26.7%
2013 Увеличивать199.9 Увеличивать7,644 Увеличивать136.7 Увеличивать5.0% Негативное увеличение8.8% Негативное увеличение33.1%
2014 Увеличивать220.4 Увеличивать8,123 Увеличивать145.7 Увеличивать4.8% Негативное увеличение7.3% Негативное увеличение39.8%
2015 Снижаться204.6 Снижаться7,274 Снижаться116.2 Увеличивать0.9% Негативное увеличение9.2% Негативное увеличение57.1%
2016 Увеличивать204.9 Снижаться7,027 Снижаться101.1 Снижаться−2.6% Негативное увеличение30.7% Негативное увеличение75.7%
2017 Увеличивать217.8 Увеличивать7,210 Увеличивать122.0 Снижаться−0.2% Негативное увеличение29.8% Положительное снижение69.3%
2018 Увеличивать220.1 Снижаться7,038 Снижаться101.4 Снижаться−1.3% Негативное увеличение16.6% Негативное увеличение93.0%
2019 Увеличивать222.5 Снижаться6,877 Снижаться84.5 Снижаться−0.7% Негативное увеличение17.1% Негативное увеличение113.6%
2020 Снижаться212.7 Снижаться6,362 Снижаться57.1 Снижаться−5.6% Негативное увеличение22.3% Негативное увеличение138.9%
2021 Увеличивать224.9 Увеличивать6,518 Увеличивать74.9 Увеличивать1.2% Негативное увеличение25.8% Положительное снижение86.8%
2022 Увеличивать248.1 Увеличивать6,944 Увеличивать122.8 Увеличивать3.0% Негативное увеличение21.4% Положительное снижение66.7%
2023 Увеличивать260.3 Увеличивать7,077 Снижаться93.8 Увеличивать1.3% Негативное увеличение13.1% Негативное увеличение84.9%

Agriculture

[edit]

Angola produced, in 2018:

  • 8.6 million tons of cassava (8th largest producer in the world);
  • 3.5 million tons of banana (7th largest producer in the world, or the 10th largest, if we consider together with plantain);
  • 2.2 million tons of maize;
  • 1.2 million tons of sweet potato (10th largest producer in the world);
  • 806 thousand tons of potato;
  • 597 thousand tons of pineapple (13th largest producer in the world);
  • 572 thousand tons of sugarcane;
  • 355 thousand tons of cabbage;
  • 314 thousand tons of beans;
  • 280 thousand tons of palm oil;
  • 154 thousand tons of peanut;

In addition to smaller productions of other agricultural products, like coffee (16 thousand tons).[40]

Foreign trade

[edit]

Exports in 2004 reached US$10,530,764,911. The vast majority of Angola's exports, 92% in 2004, are petroleum products. US$785 million worth of diamonds, 7.5% of exports, were sold abroad that year.[41] Nearly all of Angola's oil goes to the United States, 526 kbbl/d (83.6×10^3 m3/d) in 2006, making it the eighth largest supplier of oil to the United States, and to China, 477 kbbl/d (75.8×10^3 m3/d) in 2006. In the first quarter of 2008, Angola became the main exporter of oil to China.[42] The rest of its petroleum exports go to Europe and Latin America.[35] U.S. companies account for more than half the investment in Angola, with Chevron-Texaco leading the way. The U.S. exports industrial goods and services, primarily oilfield equipment, mining equipment, chemicals, aircraft, and food, to Angola, while principally importing petroleum.[citation needed] Trade between Angola and South Africa exceeded US$300 million in 2007.[43] From the 2000s, many Chinese have settled and started up businesses.[44]

Resources

[edit]

Petroleum

[edit]

Angola produces and exports more petroleum than any other nation in sub-Saharan Africa, surpassing Nigeria first in the 2000s, then in 2022.[45] In January 2007 Angola became a member of OPEC, before leaving in December 2023, as they wanted to expand their oil production. Under the Lourenço since 2017, the country has made efforts to incentive investments and reverse declining production, resulting in fresh investments made by international oil companies.

Petrol price in 2019

Chevron Corporation, TotalEnergies., ExxonMobil, Eni, and BP all operate in the country and represent a vast majority of daily production.[46]

Block 17, operated by TotalEnergies, is Angola's biggest producing asset[47] and is known as the Golden Block. The French major is currently executing several subsea tieback projects there, including CLOV 3 and Begonia, whose final investment decisions (FIDs) were taken in 2022.[48][49]

The United Nations has criticized the Angolan government for using torture, rape, summary executions, arbitrary detention, and disappearances, actions which Angolan government has justified on the need to maintain oil output.[50]

Angola is the third-largest trading partner of the United States in Sub-Saharan Africa, largely because of its petroleum exports.[51] The U.S. imports 7% of its oil from Angola, about three times as much as it imported from Kuwait just prior to the Gulf War in 1991. The U.S. Government has invested US$4 billion in Angola's petroleum sector.[52]

Oil makes up over 90% of Angola's exports.[53]

Diamonds

[edit]

Angola is the third largest producer of diamonds in Africa and has only explored 40% of the diamond-rich territory within the country, but has had difficulty in attracting foreign investment because of corruption, human rights violations, and diamond smuggling.[54] Production rose by 30% in 2006 and Endiama, the national diamond company of Angola, expects production to increase by 8% in 2007 to 10 million carats annually. The government is trying to attract foreign companies to the provinces of Bié, Malanje and Uíge.[55]

The Angolan government loses $375 million annually from diamond smuggling. In 2003, the government began Operation Brilliant, an anti-smuggling investigation that arrested and deported 250,000 smugglers between 2003 and 2006. Rafael Marques, a journalist and human rights activist, described the diamond industry in his 2006 Angola's Deadly Diamonds report as plagued by "murders, beatings, arbitrary detentions and other human rights violations." Marques called on foreign countries to boycott Angola's "conflict diamonds".[56] In December 2014, the Bureau of International Labor Affairs issued a List of Goods Produced by Child Labor or Forced Labor[57] that classified Angola as one of the major diamond-producing African countries relying on both child labor and forced labor. The U.S. Department of Labor reported that "there is little publicly available information on [Angola's] efforts to enforce child labor law".[58] Diamonds accounted for 1.48% of Angolan exports in 2014.[59]

Iron

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Under Portuguese rule, Angola began mining iron in 1957, producing 1.2 million tons in 1967 and 6.2 million tons by 1971. In the early 1970s, 70% of Portuguese Angola's iron exports went to Western Europe and Japan.[55] After independence in 1975, the Angolan Civil War (1975–2002) destroyed most of the territory's mining infrastructure. The redevelopment of the Angolan mining industry started in the late 2000s.

See also

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References

[edit]
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  4. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e "World Economic Outlook Database, October 2022". IMF.org. International Monetary Fund. Retrieved October 12, 2022.
  5. ^ Global Economic Prospects, June 2020. World Bank. June 8, 2020. p. 105. doi:10.1596/978-1-4648-1553-9. ISBN 978-1-4648-1553-9. Retrieved September 29, 2020. {{cite book}}: |website= ignored (help)
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  26. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai Общественный достояние This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain: Clark, Nancy (1989). "Background to economic development". In Collelo, Thomas (ed.). Angola: a country study. Washington, D.C.: Federal Research Division, Library of Congress. pp. 113–116. OCLC 44357178.
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  30. ^ Chisholm 1911, p. 40.
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  44. ^ Роулатт, Джастин (2 октября 2010 г.). «Китайские фанаты караоке поют похвалу Анголы» . BBC News . Получено 13 июля 2014 года .
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  49. ^ «Ангола: TotalEnergies развертывает свою многоэнергетическую стратегию, запустив три проекта в области нефти, газа и солнечной электроэнергии» . TotalEnergies.com (на французском языке). 28 июля 2022 года . Получено 20 августа 2022 года .
  50. ^ Omeje, Кеннет С. Высокие ставки и заинтересованные стороны: нефтяные конфликты и безопасность в Нигерии , 2006. Стр. 157.
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  52. ^ Vines, Alex. Ангола разворачивается: рост и падение мирного процесса Лусака , 1999. Хьюман Райтс Вотч. Страница 189.
  53. ^ "Экономика" . Посольство Анголы, Вашингтон, округ Колумбия . Архивировано с оригинала 8 марта 2016 года . Получено 20 июля 2016 года .
  54. ^ «Ангола: США должны укрепить связи для защиты стратегических интересов энергии и безопасности» . Совет по международным отношениям (Нью -Йорк) . 7 мая 2007 г. Получено 31 июля 2017 года .
  55. ^ Jump up to: а беременный "Reuters.com" . Africa.Reuters.com. 9 февраля 2009 года. Архивировано с оригинала 28 декабря 2007 года . Получено 13 июля 2014 года .
  56. ^ «Afrol News - Ангола для двойного алмаза в 2006 году» . Afrol.com . Получено 13 июля 2014 года .
  57. ^ «Список товаров, производимый детским трудом или принудительным трудом» .
  58. ^ «Результаты 2013 г. о худших формах детского труда -Ангола -» . Архивировано из оригинала 8 декабря 2015 года . Получено 9 января 2015 года .
  59. ^ "Ангола" . Страны ​ОЭС. Архивировано из оригинала 2 мая 2019 года . Получено 20 июля 2016 года .

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