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Bulgaria

72 bytes removed, 22:19, July 26, 2022
/* Economy */
|queen =
|monarch-raw =
|president =Georgi ParvanovRumen Radev
|president-raw =
|chancellor =
|chancellor-raw =
|pm =Boyko Borisov
|pm-raw =
|area =42,823 sq mi
|pop =76,606950,551 000 (20082020)
|pop-basis =
|gdp =$49.8 billion70,000,000,000 (2020)
|gdp-year =2008
|gdp-pc =$1110,300072 (2020)
|currency =Lev (plural Leva)
|idd =
|tld =.bg
}}
'''Bulgaria''' is a [[Balkan]] country in eastern [[Europe]], a former member of the old [[Warsaw Pact]], and now a current member of [[NATO]].
==Geography==
Bulgaria shares a border with [[Turkey ]] and [[Greece ]] to the south, [[Macedonia ]] and [[Serbia ]] to the west, [[Romania ]] to the north, and the [[Black Sea ]] to the east. The capital, [[Sofia]], lies in the western region of the country. *Area: 110,910 sq. &nbsp;km<sup>2</sup>. (slightly larger than Tennessee).*Major cities: Capital--Sofia Capital—Sofia 1.2 million.*Others: Plovdiv--368Plovdiv—368,568, Varna--349Varna—349,482.
*Terrain: varied, containing large mountainous areas, fertile valleys, plains and a coastline along the Black Sea.
*Climate: Continental--mild Continental—mild summers and cold, snowy winters.
==People==
*Population (2008): 7,606,551.
*Growth rate (2008): -0.43%.
*Ethnic groups (2001): Bulgarian 83.94%, Turkish 9.42%, [[Gypsies|Roma ]] 4.68%, and other 2% (including Macedonian, Armenian, Tatar, Circassian).
*Religions (2001): Bulgarian Orthodox 82.6%, Muslim 12.2%, Roman Catholic 0.6%, Protestant 0.5%, others.
*Language: Bulgarian 84.5%, other 15.5%.
*Health: Life expectancy (2006)--male 68.68 years; female 76.13 years. Infant mortality rate (2006)--19.85 deaths/1,000 live births.
*Work force (2005 est.): 3.34 million. Agriculture--11Agriculture—11%; industry--32industry—32.7%; services--32services—32% (3rd qtr. 2004 est.).
==Government and Political Conditions==
===Principal Government Officials===
*President—[[File:Georgi Parvanov Bulgaria.jpg|thumb|Georgi Parvanov.Rumen Radev]]*President--Georgi Parvanov*Prime Minister--Minister—[[Boyko Borisov]]*Deputy Prime Minister/Minister Speaker of Foreign Affairs--Ivailo Kalfin*Deputy Prime Minister/Minister of Education--Daniel Valtchev*Deputy Prime Minister/Minister of Disaster and Accidents--Emel Etem *Minister of Defense--Vesselin Bliznakov*Minister of Economy and Energy--Simeon Dyankov*Bulgaria's Commissioner to the EU--Meglena Kuneva, Commissioner for Consumer Protection{{Clear}}National Assembly—Tsveta Karayancheva
===Foreign Relations===
==Defense==
[[File:Bulgaria Bulgarian army soldiers.jpg|thumb|left|Bulgarian soldiers.]]
Bulgaria became a member of [[NATO ]] on March 29, 2004 after depositing its instruments of treaty ratification. Bulgaria's military is currently undergoing an ambitious restructuring program aimed to bring the army up to NATO standards and modernize equipment. In 2007, constitutional amendments annulled military conscription, thus allowing the Bulgarian army‘s army's transformation to an all-volunteer force.
Bulgaria has been an active participant in military operations outside its borders. It currently has company-sized units working with coalition forces in Afghanistan and Iraq and has maintained small contingents of troops deployed with international forces in Bosnia and Herzegovina and Kosovo. It deployed a frigate to Lebanon with UNIFIL in late 2006,
*Inflation rate: 7.8% (2008); 12.5% (2007); 6.5% (2006); 5% (2005); 6% (2004); 5.6% (2003).
*Unemployment rate: 5.6% (2008); 7.7% (2007 average); 6.62% (November 2007); 9.61% (2006 average); 11.5% (2005); 12.7% (2004 average); 14.25% (2003 average).
*Natural resources: Bauxite, copper, lead, zinc, iron, coal, and timber.
*Official exchange rate: Lev per $1 U.S.=1.34 (2008); 1.42 (2007 average); 1.56 (2006 average); 1.57 (2005 average); 1.58 (2004 average); 1.73 (2003 average).
[[File:House Bulgaria Tryavna.jpg|right|300px]]
Under the leadership of former Prime Minister Ivan Kostov (UDF), who came to power in 1997, an ambitious set of reforms were launched, including introduction of a currency board regime, bringing growth and stability to the Bulgarian economy. The currency board contained inflationary pressures and the three-digit inflation in 1997 was cut to only 1% in 1998. Following declines in GDP in both 1996 and 1997, the Bulgarian Government has delivered strong, steady GDP growth in real terms in recent years. Prime Minister Simeon Saxe-Coburg's economic team of young, Western-educated financiers continued to implement measures that helped sustain stable economic growth and curb unemployment. Measures introduced by the government were targeted at reducing corporate and individual taxes, curtailing corruption, and attracting foreign investment. The government also restructured the country's foreign debt, revived the local stock market, and moved ahead with long-delayed privatization of some major state monopolies. As a result of this progress, in October 2002 the European Commission declared Bulgaria had a "Functioning Market Economy." Bulgaria is Europe's 5th largest coal producer.<ref>https://web.archive.org/web/20120316132149/http://thesofiaecho.com/2011/08/18/1141389_bulgarias-ore-exports-rise-10per-cent-in-h1-2011-industry-group</ref>
Bulgaria's current government has continued these reforms, and in 2007 the country joined the European Union. According to the World Bank, in 2006 Bulgaria attracted the highest levels of foreign direct investment, as a share of GDP, among Eastern European countries. In early 2007, to attract additional foreign investment, the Bulgarian Government lowered corporate tax rates to 10%, reportedly the lowest rate in Europe. The government has decided to introduce a flat-tax rate of 10% for personal income, effective January 1, 2008, which will further decrease domestic labor costs and help reduce the share of the "gray" economy. In response to local governments' demand for financial independence in 2006, parliament passed fiscal decentralization of municipalities, thus further enhancing local economic stability. Despite Bulgaria's many marked successes, organized crime and corruption remain problems.
The first Bulgarian state was established in 635 A.D., located along the north coast of the Black Sea. In 681 A.D. the first Bulgarian state on the territory of modern Bulgaria was founded. This state consisted of a mixture of Slav and Bulgar peoples. In 864, Bulgaria adopted Orthodox Christianity. The First Bulgarian Kingdom, considered to be Bulgaria's "Golden Age," emerged under Tsar Simeon I in 893-927. During this time, Bulgarian art and literature flourished. Followers of Saints Cyril and Methodius are believed to have developed the Cyrillic alphabet in Bulgaria in the early 10th century.
In 1018, the Byzantine Empire conquered Bulgaria. In 1185 the Bulgarians broke free of Byzantine rule and established the Second Bulgarian Kingdom. A number of Bulgaria's famous monasteries were founded during this period. Following the 1242 Mongol invasion, this kingdom began losing territory to its neighbors. Ottoman expansion into the Balkan Peninsula eventually reached Bulgaria, and in 1396 Bulgaria became part of the Ottoman Empire. During the five centuries of Ottoman rule, most of Bulgaria's indigenous cultural centers were destroyed. Several Bulgarian uprisings were brutally suppressed and a great many people fled abroad. The April uprising of 1876, the Russo-Turkish War (1877-781877–78), and the Treaty of San Stefano (March 3, 1878, the date of Bulgaria's national holiday), began Bulgaria's liberation from the Ottoman Empire, but complete independence was not recognized until 1908.
During the first half of the 20th century, Bulgaria was marred by social and political unrest. Bulgaria participated in the First and Second Balkan Wars (1912 and 1913) and sided with the Central Powers, and later the Axis Powers, during the two World Wars. Although allied with Germany during World War II, Bulgaria never declared war on the Soviet Union and never sent troops abroad to fight under Nazi command. Near the end of World War II, Bulgaria changed sides to fight the German army all the way to Austria; 30,000 Bulgarian troops were killed.
Bulgaria had a mixed record during World War II, when it was allied with Nazi Germany under a March 1941 agreement. The Law for the Protection of the Nation, enacted in January 1941, divested Jews of property, livelihood, civil rights, and personal security. Despite a February 1943 agreement requiring Bulgaria to transfer Bulgaria's Jews to Nazi extermination camps in Poland, Bulgaria did not actually deport any Bulgarian Jews or Roma to Nazi concentration camps. Under that agreement, however, Bulgarian forces transferred approximately 11,000 Jews from Bulgarian-occupied territory (Thrace and Macedonia) to Nazi concentration camps. In June 1943 the government "re-settled" Sofia's 25,000 Jews to rural areas. Tsar Boris--supported Boris—supported by the parliament (especially its prominent Deputy Speaker, Dimitar Peshev), the Orthodox Church, and the general public--aided public—aided the Jewish community and helped its 50,000 members survive the war, despite harsh conditions. The Bulgarian Jews remained safe, and when they were permitted to emigrate to Israel after the war, most of them did.
King Simeon II assumed control of the throne in 1943 at the age of six following the death of his father Boris III. With the entry of Soviet troops into Bulgaria in September 1944 and the defeat of the Axis Powers in World War II, communism emerged as the dominant political force within Bulgaria. Simeon, who later returned and served as Prime Minister, was forced into exile in 1946 and resided primarily in Madrid, Spain. By 1946, Bulgaria had become a satellite of the Soviet Union, remaining so throughout the Cold War period. Todor Zhivkov, the head of the Bulgarian Communist Party, ruled the country for much of this period. During his 27 years as leader of Bulgaria, democratic opposition was crushed; agriculture was collectivized and industry was nationalized; and the Bulgarian Orthodox Church fell under the control of the state.
Source = [http://www.state.gov/r/pa/ei/bgn/3236.htm]
{{European Union}}
 
[[Category:Bulgaria]]
[[Category:European Countries]]
[[Category:Warsaw Pact Members]]
[[Category:EU Members]]
[[Category:Christian-Majority Countries]]
[[Category:Balkans]]
[[Category:Ottoman Empire]]
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