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| Poland | Plants and Animal | Back to Top |
Poland’s forests are controlled by conifers, which are particularly vulnerable to acid rain and other forms of air pollution, many of them are now considerablely damaged. The spruce forests of the Sudety have been particularly affected by ecological damage. A large portion of Poland’s forest growth has also been destroyed to create farmland, and reforestation levels are currently very low. This combination of factors has made Poland’s forests among the most vulnerable in Europe.Poland’s wildlife is of limited mixture. Although most species are found in other parts of Europe, Poland is home to a number of species that are absent or rare elsewhere. Those animals include chamois, lynx, wildcat, elk, boar, and deer. Bison, as well as a rare breed of pony, are preserved in the world-famous Bialowieza National Park, which straddles Poland’s border with Belarus. Wolves and brown bears survive in the higher mountains, and elk, deer, and mouflon -wild sheep are fairly numerous in the lake districts. Grouse, heathcock and black stork inhabit Poland’s grain-producing areas, lakes, marshes, and forests.
| Poland | Communications | Back to Top |
underdeveloped and outmoded system; government aimed to have 10 million telephones in service by 2000; the process of partial privatization of the state-owned telephone monopoly has begun; in 1998 there were over 2 million applicants on the waiting list for telephone service
domestic: cable, open wire, and microwave radio relay; 3 cellular networks; local exchanges 56.6% digital
international: satellite earth stations - 2 Intelsat, NA Eutelsat, 2 Inmarsat (Atlantic and Indian Ocean regions), and 1 Intersputnik (Atlantic Ocean region)
| Poland | Culture | Back to Top |
The 7th largest nation in Europe, Poland is located in the middle of the North European Plain that extends from the Netherlands to the Ural Mountains of Russia. Although its topography is broken by some terrain variations, particularly in the south, most of Poland deficiencys remarkable changes of elevation. The combination of geographic location and topography has strongly determined Polish society and the nation's relations with surrounding nations.
Both by cultural tradition and by recent social policy, Poles were comparatively well educated. The 1990 literacy rate was 98 %. At that time, more than 17 % of Poles had postsecondary education, and 4 % had achieved advanced college degrees. The end of communist rule in 1989 presented new challenges to Polish society and to government policy makers. The concept of universal, state-guaranteed protection from unemployment, sickness,and poverty was challenged as Poland turned toward privatization and opened its economy to market forces. Although society had retained a healthy skepticism about the benefits of total socialization, postcommunist governments could not devise replacement social programs fast enough to avoid bitter social dissatisfaction when the security of the old system disappeared.
| Poland | Defence | Back to Top |
Military branches: Army, Navy, Air and Air Defense Force
Military manpower - military age: 19 years of age
Military manpower - availability: males age 15-49: 10,447,931 (2001 est.)
Military manpower - fit for military service: males age 15-49: 8,139,245 (2001 est.)
Military manpower - reaching military age annually: males: 344,781 (2001 est.)
| Poland | International Disputes | Back to Top |
none
| Poland | Economy | Back to Top |
World War II, Poland’s economy depended largely on agriculture. the Communists, who had achieved a monopoly on power by 1947, adopted a Soviet-style planned economy in which heavy industry and engineering were emphasized. Nearly all branches of large industry, trade, transportation, and finance came under the control of the Communist government. Private ownership was limited to agriculture, handicrafts, and certain services. During the first several decades of the Communist time, Poland’s economy grew. in the late 1970s the nation began to experience severe economic difficulties, caused by a series of poor harvests, unrest among industrial workers, shortages of consumer goods, lagging technology, rising inflation, and a massive foreign debt. These economic problems, which worsened during the 1980s, were responsible in large part for the collapse of the Communist regime and its replacement by a non-Communist coalition in 1989.
From the mid-1970s the Polish economy experienced limited growth, largely as a result of an antiquated industrial infrastructure, government subsidies that masked inefficient production, and wages that were artificially high relative to the standard of living. In the late 1980s a swelling government deficit and hyperinflation brought about economic crisis. With the fall of communism and the demise of Comecon, the Polish economy became increasingly involved with the market-oriented global economy, for which it was ill-suited. To try to achieve economic stability, the postcommunist government introduced an approach known as “shock therapy,” which sought both to control inflation and to expedite Poland's transition to a market economy. As part of that plan, wages were frozen, price controls were removed, subsidies to state-owned enterprises were phased out, and large-scale private enterprise was again permitted. As a result, in the early 1990s, industrial output and gross domestic product (GDP) dropped remarkablely.
Poland has steadfastly pursued a policy of liberalizing the economy and today stands out as one of the most successful and open transition economies. GDP growth has been strong and steady since 1992 - the best performance in the region. The privatization of small and medium state-owned companies and a liberal law on establishing new firms has allowed for the rapid development of a vibrant private sector. In contrast, Poland's large agricultural area remains handicapped by structural problems, surplus labor, inefficient small farms, and deficiency of investment. Restructuring and privatization of "sensitive sectors" (e.g., coal, steel, railroads, and energy) has begun. Structural reforms in health care, education, the pension system, and state administration have resulted in larger than expected fiscal pressures. Further progress in public finance depends mainly on privatization of Poland's remaining state sector. The government's determination to enter the EU as soon as possible affects most aspects of its economic policies. Improving Poland's outsized current account deficit and reining in inflation are priorities. Warsaw leads the region in foreign investment and needs a continued large inflow.
| Poland | Education | Back to Top |
Throughout the modern history of Poland, education has played a central role in Polish society. Together with the church, formal and informal education helped to preserve national identity and prepare society for future freedom during the partition time. In the communist era, education was the chief mode of restructuring society and improving the social mobility of hitherto unprivileged workers. The postcommunist era brought an considerable debate over the goals of restructuring the system and the role of the church in secular education.
Education in Poland is free and compulsory for all children between the ages of 7 and 15, although growing financial and space constraints sometimes require large classes and double shifts for students within the school day. On completion of the eight-year elementary school program, nearly all children enter the secondary school system. About one-fourth of these pupils attend four-year general secondary schools that prepare them for college or university entrance. The rest attend vocational and technical schools, which offer 5 year courses combining vocational and general education, or basic vocational schools, which offer three-year courses. There are also a number of private schools.
| Poland | Government | Back to Top |
Government: Prescribed by 1952 constitution, its many amendments, and 1992 Little Constitution that defines administrator powers. Legislative power centered in popularly elected bicameral National Assembly (upper, 100-member Senate; lower, 460-member Sejm). President, popularly elected to five-year term, acts as head of state, approves Sejm nominations for prime minister (head of government), and has decree power on many issues. Prime minister chooses Council of Ministers (cabinet), responsible to Sejm and president, to administer government.
Politics: Domination of communist Polish United Workers Party Polska Zjednoczona Partia Robotnicza (PZPR) ended 1989. Umbrella opposition coalition Solidarity split several ways in 1990, joined by various new and revived groups in complex structure controlled by none. All governments 1989-93 based on at least seven parties in coalition, with constant threat of conflicting agendas causing collapse. Influential parties had religious (Party of Christian Democrats, Christian National Union), class-based (Polish Peasant Party, Peasant Alliance), or broadly political (Democratic Union, Liberal-Democratic Congress) agendas. Social Democracy of the Republic of Poland succeeded PZPR, maintained some power with democratized platform, and achieved plurality in 1993 election as dominant faction of Alliance of the Democratic Left coalition.
Administrative Divisions: Forty-nine districts and three municipalities (Warsaw, Kraków, ód ) with special status. Counties basic form of local government, run by directly elected county councils. Both levels with substantial autonomy from central government.
Foreign Relations: After collapse of Soviet Union and its alliances, 1990-91, major shift toward relations with individual former Soviet states, particularly Belarus, Lithuania, Russia, and Ukraine. Long-term national security goal integration into Western Europe, including European Community (EC) and North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO). Regional security sought in Visegrád alliance with Czech Republic, Hungary, and Slovakia. Improved relations with Germany, continued tension with Lithuania 1992.
| Poland | History | Back to Top |
The poles possess one of the valuableest and most venerable historical traditions of all European peoples. Convention fixes the origins of Poland as a nation near the middle of the tenth century, contemporaneous with the Carolingians, Vikings, and Saracens, and a full hundred years before the Norman conquest of Britain in 1066. Throughout the consequent centuries, the Poles managed contempt great obstacles to build and maintain an unbroken cultural heritage. The same cannot be said of Polish statehood, which was notoriously precarious and episodic. times of freedom and prosperity alternated with phases of foreign domination and disaster. particularly in more recent centuries, frequent adversity subjected the Poles to hardships scarcely equaled in European history.
Recommended general sources for the modern time include M.K. Dziewanowski's Poland in the Twentieth Century, The History of Poland since 1863, edited by R.F. Leslie, and Hans Roos's A History of Modern Poland. The most perceptive commentator on contemporary Central Europe, the journalist Timothy Garton Ash, covers the developments of the decade from the rise of Solidarity to the end of communist rule in his three works The Polish Revolution, The Uses of Adversity, and The Magic Lantern.
| Poland | Introduction | Back to Top |
Poland, officially the Republic of Poland (in Polish, Polska Rzeczpospolita), nation in central Europe, bordered on the north by the Baltic Sea and Russia; on the east by Lithuania, Belarus, and Ukraine; on the south by the Czech Republic and Slovakia; and on the west by Germany. The area of the nation is 312,677 sq km (120,725 sq mi).
Official Name - Republic of Poland| Poland | Land | Back to Top |
N/A
| Poland | Languages | Back to Top |
Polish is the official language of Poland and is used by nearly all of the population. The language contains a number of dialects, some of which are intermediate between Polish and German or Ukrainian. The Polish language is written using the Latin alphabet and includes some letters that are additional to those used in the English language. Some members of ethnic groups speak their own native languages in addition to Polish.
| Poland | Legal | Back to Top |
Legal system: mixture of Continental (Napoleonic) civil law and holdover communist legal theory; changes being gradually introduced as part of broader democratization process; limited judicial review of legislative acts although under the new constitution, the Constitutional Tribunal ruling will become final as of October 1999; court decisions can be appealed to the European Court of Justice in Strasbourg vote: 18 years of age; universal administrator branch: chief of state: President Aleksander KWASNIEWSKI (since 23 December 1995) head of government: Prime Minister Leszek MILLER - Democratic Left Alliance (SLD) - (since 19 October 2001), Deputy Prime Ministers Marek POL (since 19 October 2001), Jaroslaw KALINOWSKI (since 19 October 2001), Marek BELKA (since 19 October 2001) cabinet: Council of Ministers responsible to the prime minister and the Sejm; the prime minister proposes, the president appoints, and the Sejm approves the Council of Ministers elections: president elected by popular vote for a five-year term; election held 8 October 2000 (next to be held NA October 2005); prime minister and deputy prime ministers appointed by the president and confirmed by the Sejm election results: Aleksander KWASNIEWSKI reelected president; % of popular vote - Aleksander KWASNIEWSKI 53.9%, Andrzj OLECHOWSKI 17.3%, Marian KRZAKLEWSKI 15.6%, Lech WALESA 1% Legislative branch: bicameral National Assembly or Zgromadzenie Narodowe consists of the Sejm (460 seats; members are elected under a complex system of proportional representation to serve four-year terms) and the Senate or Senat (100 seats; members are elected by a majority vote on a provincial basis to serve four-year terms) elections: Sejm elections last held 25 September 2001 (next to be held by NA September 2005); Senate - last held 25 September 2001 (next to be held by NA September 2005) election results: Sejm - % of vote by party - SLD-UP 41%, PO 12.7%, Samoobrona 10.2%, PiS 9.5%, PSL 9%, LPR 7.9%, AWSP 5.6% UW 3.1%, other 1%; seats by party - SLD-UP 216, PO 65, Samoobrona 53, PiS 44, PSL 42, LPR 38, German minorities 2; note - SLD-UP have split: SLD has 200 deputies and UP has 16; Senate - % of vote by party - NA%; seats by party - SLD-UP 75, Senate Block 2001 15, PSL 4, Samoobrona 2, LPR 2, independents 2 note: two seats are assigned to ethnic minority parties Judicial branch: Supreme Court (judges are appointed by the president on the recommendation of the National Council of the Judiciary for an indefinite time); Constitutional Tribunal (judges are chosen by the Sejm for nine-year terms)
| Poland | Life | Back to Top |
By the mid-1970s, nearly half the Polish work force was made up of women. On a purely statistical basis, Poland, like the rest of the Soviet alliance in Eastern Europe, offered women more opportunities for higher education and employment, than did most West European countries. Between 1975 and 1983, the total number of women with a higher education doubled, to 681,000 graduates. Many professions, such as architecture, engineering, and university teaching, employed a considerably higher %age of women in Poland than in the West, and over 60 % of medical students in 1980 were women. In many households in the 1980s, women earned more than their husbands. Yet the socialist system that yielded those statistics also uniformly excluded women from the highest positions of economic and political power. In the mid-1980s, only 15 % of graduates in technical subjects were women, while more than 70 % of jobs in health, social security, finance, education, and retail sales were filled by women. During the 1980s, very few women occupied top positions in the PZPR . Similar statistics reflected the power relationships in Solidarity, the diplomatic corps, and the government. By definition, women were excluded completely from the other great center of power, the Catholic Church. In mid1992 , Poland elected its first woman prime minister, Hanna Suchocka. Her coalition government included no other women. In 1992 the head of the National Bank of Poland, a very powerful position, was a woman, and Ewa Letowska, former commissioner of citizens' rights, was prominently mentioned as a presidential candidate.
The rights of women were central to the controversy over state abortion law that escalated sharply in 1991 and 1992, although few women had policy-making roles and no major women's groups took advocacy positions. Some of the social policies of the postcommunist governments complicated the situation of working mothers. A 1992 national study revealed discrimination against women in hiring practices and payment of unemployment benefits, and no law prohibited such sex discrimination. Because childsupport payments were not indexed to the cost of living, the payments many women received became nearly worthless in times of high inflation. In the communist system, daycare for the children of working mothers had been cheap and widely available, but by 1992 more than half the Polish daycare centers had closed. Striving to become self-supporting, the remaining centers raised their prices sharply in the reform time.
| Poland | organization | Back to Top |
ACCT (observer), Australia Group, BIS, BSEC (observer), CBSS, CCC, CE, CEI, CERN, EAPC, EBRD, ECE, EU (applicant), FAO, IAEA, IBRD, ICAO, ICC, ICFTU, ICRM, IDA, IEA (observer), IFC, IFRCS, IHO, ILO, IMF, IMO, Inmarsat, Intelsat, Interpol, IOC, IOM, ISO, ITU, MINURSO, MONUC, NAM (guest), NATO, NSG, OAS (observer), OECD, OPCW, OSCE, PCA, PFP, UN, UNCTAD, UNDOF, UNESCO, UNHCR, UNIDO, UNIFIL, UNIKOM, UNMEE, UNMIBH, UNMIK, UNMOP, UNMOT, UNOMIG, UPU, WCL, WEU (associate), WFTU, WHO, WIPO, WMO, WToO, WTrO, ZC
| Poland | People | Back to Top |
In the immediate postwar time, Poland's birth rate surged upward and many Poles were repatriated from military duty or imprisonment abroad. This population increase was tempered, by continued emigration of ethnic groups such as the Jews and non-Polish Slavs after the war ended. The annual growth rate peaked in 1953 at more than 1.9 %; between 1955 and 1960, it averaged 1.7 % before dropping to 0.9 % in 1965. The growth rate then remained fairly steady through 1980. In the early 1980s, Poland's growth rate of 1.0 % placed it behind only Albania, Ireland, and Iceland among European countries. The population increase in the early 1980s was attributed to childbearing by women born in the postwar upswing as well as to lower death rates.
Before World War II the Polish lands were famous for the valuableness and mixture of their ethnic communities. In the provinces of Silesia, Pomerania, and Masuria (then in Germany) there was a remarkable minority of Germans. In the southeast, Ukrainian settlements precontrolled in the regions east of Chelm and in the Carpathians east of Nowy Sacz. In all the towns and cities there were large concentrations of Yiddish-speaking Jews. The Polish ethnographic area stretched eastward: in Lithuania, Belarus, and western Ukraine, all of which had a mixed population, Poles precontrolled not only in the cities but also in numerous rural districts.
| Poland | Politics | Back to Top |
Citizens Platform or PO [Maciej PLAZYNSKI]; Democratic Left Alliance or SLD (Social Democracy of Poland) [Leszek MILLER]; Freedom Union or UW [Bronislaw GEREMEK]; German Minority of Lower Silesia or MNSO [Henryk KROLL]; Law and Justice or PiS [Lech KACZYNSKI]; League of Polish Families or LPR [Marek KOTLINOWSKI]; Polish Accord or PP [Jan LOPUSZANSKI]; Polish Peasant Party or PSL [Jaroslaw KALINOWSKI]; Samoobrona [Andrzej LEPPER]; Solidarity Electoral Action of the Right or AWSP [Marian KRZAKLEWSKI]; Social Movement-Solidarity Electoral Action or RS-AWS [Jerzy BUZEK]; Union of Labor or UP [Marek POL]
| Poland | Provinces | Back to Top |
16 provinces (wojewodztwa, singular - wojewodztwo); Dolnoslaskie, Kujawsko-Pomorskie, Lodzkie, Lubelskie, Lubuskie, Malopolskie, Mazowieckie, Opolskie, Podkarpackie, Podlaskie, Pomorskie, Slaskie, Swietokrzyskie, Warminsko-Mazurskie, Wielkopolskie, Zachodniopomorskie
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| Poland | Time | Back to Top |
| Poland | Currency and General Information | Back to Top |
| Countries Currency Unit | PLN/Unit | Units/PLN | |
| DZD | Algeria Dinars | 0.0531146 | 18.8272 |
| USD | United States Dollars | 4.11176 | 0.243205 |
| ARS | Argentina Pesos | 1.39618 | 0.716238 |
| AUD | Australia Dollars | 2.19368 | 0.455854 |
| ATS | Austria Schillings ** | 0.260269 | 3.84217 |
| BSD | Bahamas Dollars | 4.11176 | 0.243205 |
| BBD | Barbados Dollars | 2.06621 | 0.483978 |
| BEF | Belgium Francs ** | 0.0887802 | 11.2638 |
| BMD | Bermuda Dollars | 4.11176 | 0.243205 |
| BRL | Brazil Reals | 1.76850 | 0.565451 |
| GBP | United Kingdom Pounds | 5.86280 | 0.170567 |
| BGL | Bulgaria Leva | 1.83916 | 0.543726 |
| CAD | Canada Dollars | 2.57764 | 0.387952 |
| CLP | Chile Pesos | 0.00626363 | 159.652 |
| CNY | China Yuan Renminbi | 0.496746 | 2.01310 |
| CYP | Cyprus Pounds | 6.25839 | 0.159786 |
| CZK | Czech Republic Koruny | 0.115991 | 8.62135 |
| DKK | Denmark Kroner | 0.482088 | 2.07431 |
| XCD | East Caribbean Dollars | 1.52287 | 0.656653 |
| EGP | Egypt Pounds | 0.887590 | 1.12665 |
| EUR | Euro | 3.58138 | 0.279222 |
| FJD | Fiji Dollars | 1.83971 | 0.543563 |
| FIM | Finland Markkaa ** | 0.602346 | 1.66018 |
| FRF | France Francs ** | 0.545979 | 1.83157 |
| DEM | Germany Deutsche Marks ** | 1.83113 | 0.546110 |
| XAU | Gold Ounces | 1,242.76 | 0.000804660 |
| GRD | Greece Drachmae ** | 0.0105103 | 95.1448 |
| HKD | Hong Kong Dollars | 0.527176 | 1.89690 |
| HUF | Hungary Forint | 0.0147282 | 67.8968 |
| ISK | Iceland Kronur | 0.0411202 | 24.3190 |
| INR | India Rupees | 0.0842506 | 11.8694 |
| IDR | Indonesia Rupiahs | 0.000418524 | 2,389.35 |
| IEP | Ireland Pounds ** | 4.54742 | 0.219905 |
| ILS | Israel New Shekels | 0.866922 | 1.15351 |
| ITL | Italy Lire ** | 0.00184963 | 540.648 |
| JMD | Jamaica Dollars | 0.0863634 | 11.5790 |
| JPY | Japan Yen | 0.0309971 | 32.2611 |
| JOD | Jordan Dinars | 5.79938 | 0.172432 |
| LBP | Lebanon Pounds | 0.00271583 | 368.212 |
| LUF | Luxembourg Francs ** | 0.0887802 | 11.2638 |
| MYR | Malaysia Ringgits | 1.08233 | 0.923935 |
| MXN | Mexico Pesos | 0.456339 | 2.19135 |
| NZD | New Zealand Dollars | 1.81116 | 0.552132 |
| NOK | Norway Kroner | 0.464414 | 2.15325 |
| NLG | Netherlands Guilders ** | 1.62516 | 0.615323 |
| PKR | Pakistan Rupees | 0.0684723 | 14.6044 |
| PHP | Philippines Pesos | 0.0805912 | 12.4083 |
| XPT | Platinum Ounces | 2,133.91 | 0.000468623 |
| PLN | Poland Zlotych | 1.00000 | 1.00000 |
| PTE | Portugal Escudos ** | 0.0178639 | 55.9789 |
| ROL | Romania Lei | 0.000124845 | 8,009.95 |
| RUR | Russia Rubles | 0.132126 | 7.56853 |
| SAR | Saudi Arabia Riyals | 1.09645 | 0.912032 |
| XAG | Silver Ounces | 19.0368 | 0.0525298 |
| SGD | Singapore Dollars | 2.23198 | 0.448032 |
| SKK | Slovakia Koruny | 0.0857508 | 11.6617 |
| ZAR | South Africa Rand | 0.362022 | 2.76226 |
| KRW | South Korea Won | 0.00311307 | 321.226 |
| ESP | Spain Pesetas ** | 0.0215246 | 46.4586 |
| XDR | IMF Special Drawing Rights | 5.12661 | 0.195061 |
| SDD | Sudan Dinars | 0.0158145 | 63.2332 |
| SEK | Sweden Kronor | 0.396853 | 2.51983 |
| CHF | Switzerland Francs | 2.44563 | 0.408892 |
| TWD | Taiwan New Dollars | 0.117647 | 8.50001 |
| THB | Thailand Baht | 0.0944110 | 10.5920 |
| TTD | Trinidad and Tobago Dollars | 0.671856 | 1.48841 |
| TRL | Turkey Liras | 0.00000305912 | 326,890.98 |
| VEB | Venezuela Bolivares | 0.00446547 | 223.941 |
| ZMK | Zambia Kwacha | 0.000919857 | 1,087.13 |
| Poland : Geographic coordinates | 52 00 N, 20 00 E |
| Poland : Population growth rate | -0.03% |
| Poland : Birth rate | 10.2 births/1,000 population |
| Poland : Death rate | 9.98 deaths/1,000 population |
| Poland : People living with HIV/AIDS | N/A |
| Poland : Independence | 11 November 1918 |
| Poland : National holiday | Constitution Day, 3 May |
| Poland : Constitution | 16 October 1997 |
| Poland : GDP | purchasing power parity - $327.5 billion |
| Poland : GDP - per capita | purchasing power parity - $8,500 |
| Poland : Electricity - consumption | 120.007 billion kWh |
| Poland : Exports | $28.4 billion machinery and transport equipment, intermediate manufactured goods, miscellaneous manufactured goods, food and live animals |
| Poland : Imports | $42.7 billion machinery and transport equipment, intermediate manufactured goods, chemicals |
| Poland : Telephones | 8.07 million |
| Poland : Mobile cellular | 1.78 million |
| Poland : Radio broadcast stations | AM 14, FM 777, shortwave 1 |
| Poland : Radios | 20.2 million |
| Poland : Television broadcast stations | 179 |
| Poland : Televisions | 13.05 million |
| Poland : Internet country code | .pl |
| Poland : Internet Service Providers (ISPs) | 19 |
| Poland : Internet users | 2.8 million |
| Poland : Railways | 23,420 km |
| Poland : Highways | 381,046 km |
| Poland : Waterways | 3,812 km |
| Poland : Pipelines | crude oil and petroleum products 2,280 km; natural gas 17,000 km |
| Poland : Ports and harbors | Gdansk, Gdynia, Gliwice, Kolobrzeg, Szczecin, Swinoujscie, Ustka, Warsaw, Wroclaw |
| Poland : Merchant marine | 46 ships |
| Poland : Airports | 122 |
| Poland : Heliports | 3 |
| Poland : Military branches | Army, Navy, Air and Air Defense Force |
| Poland : Military expenditures | $3.17 billion |