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• GDP: US$70.8 billion. • Main exports: Textiles, mechanical goods, phosphates, chemicals, hydrocarbons and agricultural products. • Main imports: Textiles, chemicals and foodstuff. • Main trade partners: France, Italy, Spain and Germany.
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Tunisia lacks the vast natural resources of its North African neighbours, but careful and successful economic management has
brought the country reasonable prosperity. Annual GDP growth is just over 5 per cent and current inflation is 4.1 per cent.
Only unemployment at 13.8 per cent is a cause for concern. Agriculture and mining are the foundations of the economy. The
main agricultural products are wheat, barley, olive oil, wine and fruit, but other foodstuffs have to be imported. Large quantities
of phosphate ores are mined along with iron, lead, aluminium fluoride and zinc. Tunisia is also a modest oil exporter, although
this industry is in decline; natural gas reserves are likely to last longer. There is a small manufacturing sector involved
in processing organic chemicals derived from petroleum and purification of phosphate ore. Other industries produce textiles,
construction materials, machinery, chemicals, paper and wood. Tourism dominates the service sector, though the industry is
sensitive both to the regional political climate and, more recently, international terrorism: the latter in particular has
led to a recent downturn. According to the most recent figures, over five million people visited the country in 2002, contributing
nearly US$2 billion to the Tunisian economy. Government economic policy during the last decade has followed the path of deregulation, including abolition of trade controls,
privatisation and making the Tunisian Dinar fully convertible. Tunisia's most important trade links are with the EU whose
members (principally France and Germany) account for three-quarters of all the country's trade. Economic relations were strengthened
during 1995 by the signing of a free trade agreement with the EU, which is being introduced over a 12-year period ending in
2010. This is similar in content to the association agreements signed by would-be members. Although a considerable diplomatic
coup for the Tunisian Government, the agreement was part of a wider trend of growing trade links between the southern part
of the EU and the rest of the Mediterranean basin. Tunisia is a member of the Union of the Arab Maghreb, the main North African
political and economic bloc, and of various pan-Arab economic organisations.
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Agence de Promotion de l'Industrie (API) 63 rue de Syrie, 1002 Tunis, Tunisia Tel: (71) 792 144. Website: www.tunisieindustrie.nat.tn
Chambre de Commerce et d'Industrie de Tunis 1 rue des Entrepreneurs, 1000 Tunis, Tunisia Tel: (71) 359 300. E-mail: ccitunis@planet.tn
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