Difference between revisions of "Economic: Gorgas"
Hunt.james (talk | contribs) m |
m (Format Changes) |
||
Line 7: | Line 7: | ||
[[Caucasus|DATE Caucasus]] > [[Gorgas]] > '''{{PAGENAME}}''' ←You are here | [[Caucasus|DATE Caucasus]] > [[Gorgas]] > '''{{PAGENAME}}''' ←You are here | ||
</div> | </div> | ||
+ | <div style="float:right;">__TOC__</div> | ||
Line 13: | Line 14: | ||
Gorgas possesses a somewhat weak economy as it attempts to emerge from the chaos created by its former economic dependence on Donovia. The Gorgan economy shows signs of growth despite a small population, lack of any flagship industry, and an uncertain geopolitical landscape. Gorgas enjoys significant investment from the West while it diversifies trade and locates new partners in Europe as a means to wean itself away from previous dependence on Donovia. Gorgas’ largest exports include agricultural products such as wine, nuts, and mineral water. Gorgas also exports scrap metal, ammonium nitrate, and other industrial products. The country imports most high value-added products including medicines, vehicles, aircraft, and power production equipment. | Gorgas possesses a somewhat weak economy as it attempts to emerge from the chaos created by its former economic dependence on Donovia. The Gorgan economy shows signs of growth despite a small population, lack of any flagship industry, and an uncertain geopolitical landscape. Gorgas enjoys significant investment from the West while it diversifies trade and locates new partners in Europe as a means to wean itself away from previous dependence on Donovia. Gorgas’ largest exports include agricultural products such as wine, nuts, and mineral water. Gorgas also exports scrap metal, ammonium nitrate, and other industrial products. The country imports most high value-added products including medicines, vehicles, aircraft, and power production equipment. | ||
− | |||
==Table of Economic Data== | ==Table of Economic Data== |
Revision as of 15:50, 29 October 2018
DATE Caucasus > Gorgas > Economic: Gorgas ←You are here
The Caucasus countries that possess hydrocarbon resources will continue to depend on the oil and gas industries to drive their economies, while those that do not possess such resources will attempt to tie themselves to hydrocarbon-rich nations. Both Ariana and Atropia face geopolitical difficulties in exporting their oil and natural gas. Bordered by adversaries, the Arianians and Atropians must rely on tenuous routes to export their resources. For Gorgas and Limaria, which lack extractive or mature industries, transshipment of hydrocarbon products or providing other services to oil-wealthy countries will be their primary short- to medium-term means to achieve economic development. Donovia continues to recover from a collapse two decades ago that crippled its economy. All nations of the Caucasus have relatively high inefficiency due to corruption, government involvement in the economy, and/or lack of export industry development.
Gorgas possesses a somewhat weak economy as it attempts to emerge from the chaos created by its former economic dependence on Donovia. The Gorgan economy shows signs of growth despite a small population, lack of any flagship industry, and an uncertain geopolitical landscape. Gorgas enjoys significant investment from the West while it diversifies trade and locates new partners in Europe as a means to wean itself away from previous dependence on Donovia. Gorgas’ largest exports include agricultural products such as wine, nuts, and mineral water. Gorgas also exports scrap metal, ammonium nitrate, and other industrial products. The country imports most high value-added products including medicines, vehicles, aircraft, and power production equipment.
Table of Economic Data
Measure | Data | Remarks (if applicable) |
---|---|---|
Nominal GDP | $20.23 billion | Agriculture 11.0%, Industry 27.1%, Services 61.9% |
Real GDP Growth Rate | 2.9% | 5 year average 4.2% |
Labor Force | 1.9 million | Agriculture 55.6%, Industry 8.9%, Services 35.5% |
Unemployment Rate | 16.4% | |
Poverty Rate | 30.8% | % of population living below the international poverty line |
Net Foreign Direct Investment | $4.55 billion | No outbound FDI |
Budget | $3.13 billion revenue
$4.03 billion expenditure |
|
Public Debt | 34.1% of GDP | |
Inflation | 1.5% | Very low, 5 year average 7.3% |
Participation in the Global Financial System
Over the past decade, the Caucasus nations made considerable efforts to integrate themselves into the global financial system. While focused on local conflicts, the Caucasus region opened to other countries to increase global markets for its products, especially petroleum, and looked to the West for economic developmental aid, usually in the form of loans and grants.
IMF/World Bank/International Development Aid
Gorgas is a member of both the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank. International development aid to Gorgas focuses on infrastructure improvements and government services. Critical shortfalls in the Gorgan economy include public sector finance, medical services, and public infrastructure.
Foreign Direct Investment
Gorgas received $1.05 billion in foreign direct investment (FDI) last year from foreign sources. Thirty-eight percent of FDI went into the energy field, while 25% went to services and 20% to construction. The Netherlands, Britain, and Denmark provide the most FDI in Gorgas.
Economic Activity
Unlike its petroleum-rich neighbors, Gorgas emerged from the shadow of Donovia on the backs of service providers, where one-third of the populace work but generate 62% of the country’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP). Agriculture, much of it at subsistence levels, employs the majority of the population but produces just 11% of the GDP. Within certain sectors such as wine, Gorgas maintains an excellent export position. Gorgas has teamed extensively with Atropia to export hydrocarbon products through pipelines that terminate in Gorgas. Despite all this, Gorgan economic growth will continue to be limited due to ongoing tensions with Donovia that limit economic interactions between the two countries.
Economic Actors
Gorgas maintains a relatively free and open society, and a number of large corporations like the Bank of Gorgas, Gorgan Airlines, and MagniCom dominate the country’s economy. Many sectors in Gorgas, like airlines and banking, only possess one or two large actors along with a smattering of smaller players.
Commercial Trade and Military Exports/Imports
Gorgas maintains a small commercial trade sector with slow but steady growth. The country generally imports its military goods. Most Gorgan trade occurs domestically, with minimal international trade with Atropia and the EU. Gorgas imports its military hardware primarily from the US, Israel, and other Western nations.
Economic Diversity
Energy Sector
Without hydrocarbon natural resources, hydroelectric power provides the bulk of Gorgan-produced energy supplies. Gorgas imports most of its energy from neighboring states and receives 10% transmission fee for Donovian natural gas that passes through the country. Gorgas continues to build a strong hydrocarbon transshipment relationship with Atropia and hopes to obtain the majority of its energy requirements from there. Investments in the various pipelines that cross Gorgas and more modern handling facilities on the Black Sea will increase this capability. Gorgas also possesses some gasoline and diesel fuel plants that use imported crude oil.
Agriculture
While Gorgans only cultivate 12% of the country’s land, the agricultural industry employs 55.6% of Gorgas’ total labor force and generates 11% of the total GDP. Agricultural products include citrus, grapes, tea, and hazelnuts. Tea plantations occupy more than 150,000 acres and possess the most modern picking machinery. The vineyards constitute one of the oldest and most important branches of Gorgan agriculture. Orchards occupy some 500 square miles, and the slight differences in climate and soil affect the yield, quality, and taste of Gorgan fruit. Sugar beets and tobacco also play a significant role as Gorgan commercial crops. Gorgan farmers produce some grains, especially wheat, but not enough to meet domestic needs, so Gorgas must import wheat. Droughts hit the Gorgan agricultural industry very hard over the past five years, but the farmers expect to eventually rebound. For the immediate future, the agricultural field will only grow about 0.5% annually.
Forestry
Forestry is a traditional Gorgan industry. While forests occupy over 40% of all Gorgan territory, their qualitative consistency and productivity continue to degrade, thus decreasing production. Worsening conditions in Gorgan forests led to reduction and sometimes even loss of functionality. As a result, avalanches and landslides in the mountainous regions of western areas cause many accidents.
Manufacturing
Manufacturing remains a limited element of the Gorgan economy. A small number of manufacturing plants produce the bulk of the country’s industrial output. Through recent labor reforms and investment laws, the Gorgan government attempted to increase its manufacturing output. While the current economic downturn choked off foreign investment, it remains likely that Gorgan’s low structural costs will attract some investors to its manufacturing sector. Major Gorgan products include machine tools, prefabricated buildings, cast iron, steel pipe, synthetic ammonia, and silk thread.
Banking and Finance
Public Finance
The National Bank of Gorgas functions as the central bank and creates the country’s monetary policy. The Bank operates as an independent entity, with the Gorgan president appointing its members. Gorgan businesses pay no taxes, and individuals pay a 25% flat tax. Gorgan public debt stands at 34% of the GDP, and the country possesses foreign reserves of $1 billion.
Private Banking
Banking remains a primary weakness of the Gorgan economy. Individual entrepreneurs established the Gorgan banks with little capital and virtually no government oversight. The resultant failures created a consolidation in the industry but undercut public confidence. Both international and domestic banks operate in Gorgas.
Employment Status
A lack of economic development and a decline in international trade mean that unemployment remains high in Gorgas. Labor-intensive markets with low productivity, especially in the rural areas, hinder the country’s overall productivity. Many non-agricultural employment opportunities exist in export-driven market sectors and remain highly susceptible to international market forces. Gorgas’ unemployment rate increased from 13.6% four years ago to 16.4% at present. Employment status nationally is assessed as medium.
Illegal Economic Activity
A great variety of criminal activity occurs throughout Gorgas. The country serves as a prime transshipment point for drugs from Central Asia, and corruption exists, driven in part by organized crime. The Gorgan state apparently lacks the resources to effectively tackle crime, especially crime in the mountainous northeastern border with Donovia. It remains likely that much of the support provided to anti-government elements in southern Donovia comes from criminal and terrorist organizations that operate in this region. Zabzimek and South Ostremek are also dangerous, and organized crime permeates both areas. In addition, while Gorgas enacted a limited official trade embargo against Limaria in order to placate Atropia, it purposefully turns a blind eye to illegal Gorgan-Limarian cross-border trade.
Three groups highlight the variety of criminal activities occurring in Gorgas. Nowhere is corruption driven by organized crime more apparent in the country than in the Gorgan Tourist Association. Officially this group poses as a sophisticated travel bureau catering to an international visitors’ market. In reality it is a cover organization wherein organized criminal elements target wealthy foreigners, while bribing local police officials to experience “delays” and “language issues” when responding to foreigners’ calls for help. A phony nongovernmental organization (NGO) active among Muslim minority communities in Gorgas is the Hawala Assistance Brotherhood. This group cultivates an impression among economically deprived classes that it exists to benefit them as a viable alternative to the country’s formal banking system. In reality, the Brotherhood is a band of loan sharks who engage in extortion, kidnapping, and even murder when borrowers fail to make loan payments on schedule. Finally, the Pan-Caucasus Petrol Distributers is a criminal smuggling and illegal mining ring that pretends to operate as a legitimate business enterprise while actually circumventing government restrictions imposed on Gorgan-Limarian cross-border trading activities.
Summary
Complex economic interplay between the Caucasus countries binds them together. Limaria, Gorgas, and Atropia were strongly affected by the reduction of Donovian influence two decades ago. The oil- rich countries of Ariana and Atropia must use their Limarian and Gorgan neighbors to transship hydrocarbon resources to other countries. Limaria and Gorgas must develop free-standing economies despite significant corruption, lack of developed industries, and natural resource shortages. Over all of this, Donovia seeks to limit Arianian influence and return to its former position as unquestioned regional hegemon. This economic interdependence will likely drive regional conflicts as the nations struggle amongst themselves to exploit riches created by oil and natural gas.
DATE Caucasus Quick Links . | |
---|---|
Ariana | Political • Military • Economic • Social • Information • Infrastructure • Physical Environment • Time |
Atropia | Political • Military • Economic • Social • Information • Infrastructure • Physical Environment • Time |
Donovia | Political • Military • Economic • Social • Information • Infrastructure • Physical Environment • Time |
Gorgas | Political • Military • Economic • Social • Information • Infrastructure • Physical Environment • Time |
Limaria | Political • Military • Economic • Social • Information • Infrastructure • Physical Environment • Time |
Pirtuni | Political • Military • Economic • Social • Information • Infrastructure • Physical Environment • Time |