Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Economy_of_Honduras> ?p ?o }
- Economy_of_Honduras abstract "The economy of Honduras is based mostly on agriculture, which accounts for 14% of its gross domestic product (GDP) in 2013. Leading export coffee ($340 million) accounted for 22% of total Honduran export revenues. Bananas, formerly the country's second-largest export until being virtually wiped out by 1998's Hurricane Mitch, recovered in 2000 to 57% of pre-Mitch levels. Cultivated shrimp is another important export sector. Since the late 1970s, towns in the north began industrial production through maquiladoras, especially in San Pedro Sula and Puerto Cortés.Honduras has extensive forests, marine, and mineral resources, although widespread slash and burn agricultural methods continue to destroy Honduran forests. Unemployment is estimated at around 28%. The Honduran economy grew 4.8% in 2000, recovering from the Mitch-induced recession (-1.9%) of 1999. The Honduran maquiladora sector, the third-largest in the world, continued its strong performance in 2000, providing employment to over 120,000 and generating more than $528 million in foreign exchange for the country. Inflation, as measured by the consumer price index, was 10.1% in 2000, down slightly from the 10.9% recorded in 1999. The country's international reserve position continued to be strong in 2000, at slightly over $1 billion. Remittances from Hondurans living abroad (mostly in the U.S.) rose 28% to $410 million in 2000. The Lempira (currency) was devaluing for many years but stabilized at L19 to the US dollar in 2005. The Honduran people are among the poorest in Latin America; Gross national income per capita (2007) is $US 1,649; the average for Central America is $US 6,736.Honduras is the fourth poorest country in the Western Hemisphere; only Haiti, Nicaragua, and Guyana are poorer. Utilizing alternative statistical measurements in addition to the Gross Domestic Product can provide greater context for the nation's poverty.The country signed an Enhanced Structural Adjustment Facility (ESAF) -- later converted to a Poverty Reduction and Growth Facility (PRGF) with the International Monetary Fund in March 1999. Honduras (as of about year 2000) continues to maintain stable macroeconomic policies. It not been swift to implementing structural changes such as privatization of the publicly owned telephone and energy distribution companies—changes which are desired by the IMF and other international lenders. Honduras received significant debt relief in the aftermath of Hurricane Mitch, including the suspension bilateral debt service payments and bilateral debt reduction by the Paris Club—including the U.S. -- worth over $400 million. In July 2000, Honduras reached its decision point under the Heavily Indebted Poor Countries Initiative (HIPC), qualifying the country for interim multilateral debt relief.Lack of resources, lack of arable land, and a small domestic market continue to impede economic progress in Honduras. Most significantly, Honduras lacks abundant natural resources; only land appears to be plentiful and readily exploitable. But the presence of apparently extensive land is misleading because the nation's rugged, mountainous terrain restricts large-scale agricultural production to narrow strips on the coasts and to a few fertile valleys. Honduras's manufacturing sector has not yet developed beyond simple textile and agricultural processing industries and assembly operations. The small domestic market and competition from more industrially advanced countries in the region have inhibited more complex industrialization.".
- Economy_of_Honduras thumbnail Tegucigalpa_Cerro_Juan_A._Laínez.jpg?width=300.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageExternalLink memoria_anual_2008w.pdf.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageExternalLink coffee-project.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageExternalLink www.cafeelindio.us.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageExternalLink Honduras-2013-11-final.pdf.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageExternalLink org.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageID "13399".
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageLength "77773".
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageOutDegree "121".
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageRevisionID "704319294".
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink 1,000,000,000.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink 1963_Honduran_coup_dxc3xa9tat.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink AFL–CIO.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Agriculture.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink American_Institute_for_Free_Labor_Development.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Banana.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Bay_Islands_Department.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Capital_flight.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Category:Economy_of_Honduras.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Category:World_Trade_Organization_member_economies.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Center_for_Economic_and_Policy_Research.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Central_American_Integration_System.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Central_Bank_of_Honduras.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Child_labour.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Chiquita_Brands_International.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Christian_Democratic_Party_of_Honduras.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Cigar.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Clothing.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Coffee.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Coffee_production_in_Honduras.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Common_external_tariff.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Confederación_Unitaria_de_Trabajadores_de_Honduras.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Confederation_of_Honduran_Workers.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Consumer_price_index.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Copán.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Devaluation.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Dole_Food_Company.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Dominican_Republic–Central_America_Free_Trade_Agreement.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Ecotourism.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink El_Cajón_Dam_(Honduras).
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink El_Mochito_mine.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Factors_of_production.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Federación_Unitaria_de_Trabajadores_de_Honduras.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Football_War.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Foreign_direct_investment.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Forest.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Free_trade_zone.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Friedrich_Ebert_Foundation.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Fruit.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink GDP_deflator.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink General_Workers_Central.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Generalized_System_of_Preferences.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Gold.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Gross_domestic_product.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Gross_national_income.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Guyana.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Haiti.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Heavily_indebted_poor_countries.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Honduran_lempira.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Hurricane_Fifi–Orlene.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Hurricane_Mitch.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Import_substitution_industrialization.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Inflation.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink International_Confederation_of_Free_Trade_Unions.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink International_Monetary_Fund.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink La_Ceiba.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Land_titling.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Latin_America.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink List_of_Goods_Produced_by_Child_Labor_or_Forced_Labor.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink List_of_countries_by_GDP_(PPP).
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink List_of_countries_by_GDP_(nominal).
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Lobster.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Maquiladora.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Marine_biology.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Mineral.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Multinational_corporation.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink National_Congress_of_Honduras.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink National_Party_of_Honduras.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Nicaragua.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink PDVSA.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Palm_oil.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Paris_Club.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Peasant.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Poverty_Reduction_and_Growth_Facility.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Puerto_Castilla,_Honduras.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Puerto_Cortés.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Puerto_Lempira.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Rafael_Leonardo_Callejas_Romero.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Rainforest_Alliance.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Remittance.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Rosario_Mining_Company.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink San_Pedro_Sula.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Shrimp.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Slash-and-burn.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Social_safety_net.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Squatting.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Standard_&_Poors.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Sugar.
- Economy_of_Honduras wikiPageWikiLink Tegucigalpa.