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Leader:
Luis Alberto Monge
Economy:
GNP of $1730 per person (1980) monetary unit; colon
Main
exports:
coffee, bananas, sugar, beef
National
debt:
$3.3 billion (1982)
People:
2.2 million
Health:
Infant mortality 24 per 1000 live births
Daily
calorie availability: 113%
Culture:
97% white and mestizos; small black and native Indian minorities
Religion:
predominantly Roman Catholic, with some Protestant groups, Spanish
colony from 16 19th Century; independent since
1836.
Source:
World Development Report 1982
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The
Switzerland of Central America, the friendliest
people, the happiest children. Descriptions of Costa
Rica by both visitors and Ticos, as the people call themselves after
the colonial saying we are all hermaniticos (little
brothers), abound in superlatives. Indeed this tiny, little-known
country that abolished its army 35 years ago is also the most democratic
and peaceful in Latin America with the highest literacy rate
and an excellent health record.
Columbus
is supposed to have given the country its name after being met in
1502 by Carib Indians wearing gold ornaments, but in the resulting
colonisation and exploration by Spain little gold was found. The
proud Indians fought to their deaths and so that other valuable
commodity, slave labour, was not available either. Costa Rica became
the Cinderella of the Spanish colonies and was left to those settlers
who wanted to cultivate the rich but remote land of the high central
valley, running from north to south between dramatic mountain ranges.
Consequently
it became a country of small landowners who traded amongst themselves
with no subversient, non-white class.
Individual
coffee plantations are now scattered liberally over the fertile
mountain sides, making use of even the steepest slopes. The tropical
coastlines of the Caribbean and the Pacific about in banana and
coconut groves and the northern groves and the northern plains provide
beef steaks for Detroit.
The
capital San José, a myriad of corrugated iron roofs and wooden verandas,
is slowly being dwarfed by concrete monsters and billboards. The
stranger will be amazed at the popularity of the telephone system,
which Ticos use in abundance, often queuing.
Ticos
laugh off their insignificance in world teams and the constant confusion
of visitors with Puerto Rico. Instead, they cherish quietly the
image of their country as an oasis of peace in turbulent
Central America. They are deeply proud the Don Pepe
Jose Figueras, the father figure of the modern state established
in 1948, pledged the country to peace and took it upon himself to
abolish the army.
Yet
many observers feel that this pride, while justified, may fall prey
to economic and political trans in the region. Caught within the
stranglehold of the world banking systems, Costa Rica now has the
highest per capita national debt in the world. Financial aid from
the US carries a price tag support for American intervention
in Central America.
In
1856 American Empire-builder and opportunist William Walker attempted
to overrun Costa Rica but was repulsed by the people. Protest signs
during US President Reagans visit last year showed that the
insult is still deeply ingrained in the Costa Rican psyche. Ni
William Walker, ni Ronald Reagan they read. This time, however,
they might not be so lucky.
Francis
Dobbs
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