title
macrohistory & world report

Republic of Estonia

Geography

By the Baltic Sea and Gulf of Finland, north of Latvia and west of Russia. Capital: Tallinn.

Government and Independence

The Estonians have been ruled by the Danes, Swedes, Germans and by the Russians. They were independent following the fall of Russia's tsar Nicholas II and were forced back under Russian, or Soviet, rule in 1940. They were emotional about getting Russian troops out and winning back their independence, which came with the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, the last of the Russian troops leaving in 1994.

In 2004, Estonia joined the European Union, and upset Russia by joining NATO.

Economy

Figures unless otherwise stated are from the CIA Factbook.

Factbook: "Estonia's economy slowed down markedly and fell sharply into recession in mid-2008, primarily as a result of an investment and consumption slump following the bursting of the real estate market bubble. GDP dropped nearly 15% in 2009, among the world's highest rates of contraction."

Factbook: "Estonia, a 2004 European Union entrant, has a modern market-based economy and one of the highest per capita income levels in Central Europe. Estonia's successive governments have pursued a free market, pro-business economic agenda and have wavered little in their commitment to pro-market reforms."

Estimated per capita GDP (2009 U.S. dollars)

2009: $18,700 (ranks 62nd)
2008: $21,700
2007: $22,400

GDP annual real (not per capita) growth rate estimate

2009: -14.1%
2008: -3%
2007: 7.2%

Unemployment rate

2009: 14.3%
2008: 5.7% 

Public debt

2009: 7.5% of GDP

Household income or consumption by percentage share:
2004: Top ten percent of the population: 27.7%; bottom ten percent: 2.7%

Population

Living in an urban area: 69% (2008)

July 2009: 1.229 million. Growth rate: -0.632%
July 2008: 1.3 million

Migrations:

2009: More leaving than arriving. A net loss of 3.26 persons per 1,000 population, about the same as 2008 and 20055, when most were going to Finland and almost as many to Germany.

Health

Infant mortality (deaths before the age of one year per 1,000 live births)

2009: 7.32
2008: 7.45
2005: 7.07

Average life expectancy at birth

2009: 72.82 years
2008: 72.56
2005: 71.77

Estonia spent $243 for health care per person in 1999, compared to $28 per person in the Ukraine and $85 for Belarus. For Finland this figure is $1,704 and for Sweden $2,145. 

Ethnicities

Estonia has a Russian minority at around 29 percent of its population. It is divided among Lutherans, Eastern Orthodox and various other Protestant denominations. Catholics in 2002 were 0.4 percent of the population

Pollution

.From Soviet times, Estonians suffered air pollution from oil-shale burning power plants and extensive pollution of war. By the year 2000 the air pollution was reduces to 80 percent what they had been in 1980, and by 2000 the discharging of unpurified wastewater into the environment was reduced to one-twentieth the amount in 1980. At points, coastal water remains polluted. 

Crime

For every thousand persons, Estonia has 3.23 in prison, compared to 5.7 for Russia, 0.94 for France and 1.11 for Canada.

The Internet

Around 33 percent of Estonia's population access the internet, compared to 40 percent for the United Kingdom, 4 percent for Russia and 1.8 percent for the Ukraine. 

Olympics

Its all-time per capita medal wins at Olympic summer games puts it in eleventh among nations, between New Zealand and Australia.

SOURCES:
http://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/
http://www.nationmaster.com/index.php
http://www.catholic-hierarchy.org/diocese/desto.html

Copyright © 2010 by Frank E. Smitha. All rights reserved.