Daily Almanac for
Jul 10, 2009
Search White Pages
Search: Infoplease Info search tips
Search: Biographies Bio search tips

Sponsored LinksTravel reviews & great deals at TripAdvisor:

EncyclopediaMozambique, country, Africa

Economy

In 1990, Mozambique was estimated to be the world's poorest nation; since then, the country has been in transition toward a more market-oriented economy and the prospect of raising its standard of living. Mozambique remains an overwhelmingly agricultural and poor country, however, with the majority of its workers engaged in traditional subsistence cultivation of such crops as cassava, corn, coconuts, potatoes, and sunflowers. The principal cash crops are cotton, cashews, sugarcane, tea, sisal, citrus, and tropical fruits. Cattle and goats are raised, but their numbers are kept low by the tsetse fly. There are forestry and fishing industries, including prawns. The country's mineral wealth has not been determined fully; however, titanium and natural-gas deposits are being developed by foreign investors. There are also significant coal deposits, which are mined in small amounts, as well as hydropower. Many citizens work abroad in South African mines.

Mozambique's industrial sector includes the processing of raw materials (mostly food, cotton, and tobacco) and the production of chemical fertilizer, aluminum, petroleum products, textiles, glass, and asbestos. Electricity from the giant Cahora Bassa hydroelectric project (located on the Zambezi near Tete) is exported to South Africa. A smaller hydroelectric plant is situated at Chicamba Real (near Beira) on the Revùe River. The economy is also reliant on foreign aid.

Mozambique has a substantial trade imbalance, although export earnings have increased in recent years. The principal imports are machinery and equipment, motor vehicles, fuel, chemicals, metal products, food, and textiles; chief exports are aluminum, prawns, cashews, cotton, sugar, citrus, timber, and bulk electricity. The Netherlands and South Africa are the country's main trading partners. Mozambique also derives income from handling foreign trade for nearby countries; goods are shipped on rail lines that terminate at the ports of Maputo, Nacala, Lumbo (near Moçambique), and Beira. A toll road that opened in 1998 carries goods from South Africa's industrial north to Maputo.

The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, 6th ed. Copyright © 2007, Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.

    • Cite
    • Print
    • Bookmark

Premium Partner Content
HighBeam Research

Related content from HighBeam Research on: Mozambique, country, Africa: Economy

Middle East & Africa: Mozambique - Ready For Stage Two Reforms - Mozambique's Prime Minister, Luisa Diogo, Tells James Eedes About The Country's Immense Progress In The Past Decade And Its Plans For Future Reforms. (The Banker)

Tomorrow is a different country: over the past 10 years, Mozambique has changed out of all recognition. The growth rate is accelerating as its ties with next-door economic giant, South Africa grow stronger. (Countryfile: Mozambique). (African Business)

The power game at Cahora Bassa. (South Africa, Mozambique and Portugal) (The Economist (US))

Southern Africa's opportunity: if peace can be secured in Angola and Mozambique, the whole region's prospects could be transformed. (Editorial) (The Economist (US))

MOZAMBIQUE: Down but never out.(South Africa invests in development of transportation corridor) (African Business)

Letting go of South Africa's helping hand: one of Mozambique's greatest assets is to have South Africa as its next door neighbour. The latter has played a great part in Mozambique's continuing growth path, but, Neil Ford argues, it is now time for Mozambique to strike out on its own.(MOZAMBIQUE) (African Business)

MOZAMBIQUE'S ECONOMY (Our Times)

Strangling Mozambique: International Monetary Fund "stabilization" in the world's poorest country. (Multinational Monitor)

Swaziland into lucrative corridor.(South Africa - Mozambique highway)(Brief Article) (African Business)

ECONOMY-WIDE EFFECTS OF CLIMATE VARIABILITY AND CLIMATE PREDICTION IN MOZAMBIQUE.(Statistical Data Included) (American Journal of Agricultural Economics)

Additional search results provided by HighBeam Research, LLC. © Copyright 2005. All rights reserved.