Germany 



Facts
Population:
83,029,536 (July 2001 est.)
Age structure:
0-14 years:
15.57% (male 6,635,328; female 6,289,994)
15-64 years:
67.82% (male 28,619,237; female 27,691,698)
65 years and over:
16.61% (male 5,336,664; female 8,456,615) (2001 est.)
Population growth rate:
0.27% (2001 est.)
Birth rate:
9.16 births/1,000 population (2001 est.)
Death rate:
10.42 deaths/1,000 population (2001 est.)
Net migration rate:
4 migrant(s)/1,000 population (2001 est.)
Sex ratio:
at birth:
1.06 male(s)/female
under 15 years:
1.05 male(s)/female
15-64 years:
1.03 male(s)/female
65 years and over:
0.63 male(s)/female
total population:
0.96 male(s)/female (2001 est.)
Infant mortality rate:
4.71 deaths/1,000 live births (2001 est.)
Life expectancy at birth:
total population:
77.61 years
male:
74.47 years
female:
80.92 years (2001 est.)
Total fertility rate:
1.38 children born/woman (2001 est.)
HIV/AIDS - adult prevalence rate:
0.1% (1999 est.)
HIV/AIDS - people living with HIV/AIDS:
37,000 (1999 est.)
HIV/AIDS - deaths:
600 (1999 est.)
Nationality:
noun:
German(s)
adjective:
German
Ethnic groups:
German 91.5%, Turkish 2.4%, other 6.1% (made up largely of Serbo-Croatian, Italian, Russian, Greek, Polish, Spanish)
Religions:
Protestant 38%, Roman Catholic 34%, Muslim 1.7%, unaffiliated or other 26.3%
Languages:
German
Literacy:
definition:
age 15 and over can read and write
total population:
99% (1977 est.)
male:
NA%
female:
NA%
GDP:
purchasing power parity - $1.936 trillion (2000 est.)
GDP - real growth rate:
3% (2000 est.)
GDP - per capita:
purchasing power parity - $23,400 (2000 est.)
GDP - composition by sector:
agriculture:
1.2%
industry:
30.4%
services:
68.4% (1999)
Population below poverty line:
NA%
Inflation rate (consumer prices):
2% (2000 est.)
Labor force:
40.5 million (1999 est.)
Labor force - by occupation:
industry 33.4%, agriculture 2.8%, services 63.8% (1999)
Unemployment rate:
9.9% (2000 est.)
Budget:
revenues:
$996 billion
expenditures:
$1.036 trillion, including capital expenditures of $NA (1999 est.)
Industries:
among the world's largest and most technologically advanced producers of iron, steel, coal, cement, chemicals, machinery, vehicles, machine tools, electronics, food and beverages; shipbuilding; textiles
Industrial production growth rate:
4.7% (2000)
Electricity - production:
531.377 billion kWh (1999)
Electricity - production by source:
fossil fuel:
63.29%
hydro:
3.59%
nuclear:
30.3%
other:
2.82% (1999)
Electricity - consumption:
495.181 billion kWh (1999)
Electricity - exports:
39.5 billion kWh (1999)
Electricity - imports:
40.5 billion kWh (1999)
Agriculture - products:
potatoes, wheat, barley, sugar beets, fruit, cabbages; cattle, pigs, poultry
Exports:
$578 billion (f.o.b., 2000 est.)
Exports - commodities:
machinery, vehicles, chemicals, metals and manufactures, foodstuffs, textiles
Exports - partners:
EU 55.3% (France 11.3%, UK 8.3%, Italy 7.3%, Netherlands 6.3%, Belgium/Luxembourg 5.1%), US 10.1%, Japan 2.0% (1999)
Imports:
$505 billion (f.o.b., 2000 est.)
Imports - commodities:
machinery, vehicles, chemicals, foodstuffs, textiles, metals
Imports - partners:
EU 52.2% (France 10.5%, Netherlands 7.6%, Italy 7.4%, UK 6.9%, Belgium/Luxembourg 5.6%), US 8.1%, Japan 4.9% (1999)
Debt - external:
$NA
Economic aid - donor:
ODA, $5.6 billion (1998)
Currency:
deutsche mark (DEM); euro (EUR)
note:
on 1 January 1999, the EU introduced the euro as a common currency that is now being used by financial institutions in Germany at a fixed rate of 1.95583 deutsche marks per euro and will replace the local currency for all transactions in 2002
Currency code:
DEM; EUR
Exchange rates:
euros per US dollar - 1.0659 (January 2001), 1.0854 (2000), 0.9386 (1999); deutsche marks per US dollar - 1.69 (January 1999), 1.7597 (1998), 1.7341 (1997), 1.5048 (1996)
Fiscal year:
calendar year
Statistics: CIA World Factbook.
Press
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
>>
Displaying 1 to 7 of 82 items.
(Centrist), Munich
http://www.abendzeitung.de
Art
(Art magazine), Stuttgart
http://www.augsburger-allgemeine.de/Home
Avnet
(Independent), Hamburg
(Centrist), Berlin
http://www.berliner-morgenpost.de/
(Liberal), Berlin
http://www.berlinonline.de
(Science monthly), Stuttgart
http://www.wissenschaft.de/
Germany in the News
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
>>
Displaying 33 to 36 of 59 items.
Giuliana Sgrena's war diary from Baghdad, published in Hamburg's Die Zeit and the Italian newspaper Il Manifesto, offers a moving and vivid account of life in Baghdad during the bombing.
Writing in Berlin's Freitag, Thomas Knauf argues that a world war museum would provide a public place to discuss war and unlearn patriotic values.
Writing in Der Spiegel, Frank Patalong reports on a growing number of U.S. Web sites that are calling for boycotts of German-made goods.
World Press Review correspondents describe how the war with Iraq is being covered in their countries.