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World Factbook: Finland Economy


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Finland



Finland Economy:

Finland has a highly industrialized, largely free-market economy, with per capita output roughly that of the UK, France, Germany, and Italy. Its key economic sector is manufacturing - principally the wood, metals, engineering, telecommunications, and electronics industries. Trade is important, with exports equaling two-fifths of GDP. Finland excels in high-tech exports, e.g., mobile phones. Except for timber and several minerals, Finland depends on imports of raw materials, energy, and some components for manufactured goods. Because of the climate, agricultural development is limited to maintaining self-sufficiency in basic products. Forestry, an important export earner, provides a secondary occupation for the rural population. Rapidly increasing integration with Western Europe - Finland was one of the 12 countries joining the European Economic and Monetary Union (EMU) - will dominate the economic picture over the next several years. Growth in 2003 was held back by the global slowdown but picked up in 2004. High unemployment remains a persistent problem.

GDP (purchasing power parity):
$151.2 billion (2004 est.)

GDP — real growth rate:
3% (2004 est.)

GDP — per capita:
purchasing power parity: $29,000 (2004 est.)

GDP — composition by sector:
agriculture: 3.3%
industry: 30.2%
services: 66.5%
(2004)

Labor force:
2.66 million (2004 est.)

Labor force — by occupation:
agriculture and forestry: 8%, industry: 22%, construction: 6%, commerce: 14%, finance, insurance, and business services: 10%, transport and communications: 8%, public services: 32%

Unemployment rate:
8.9% (2004 est.)

Population below poverty line:
NA

Household income or consumption by percentage share:
lowest 10%: 4.2%
highest 10%: 21.6% (1991)

Distribution of family income — Gini index:
25.6 (1991 est.)

Inflation rate (consumer prices):
0.7% (2004 est.)

Investment (gross fixed):
18.3% of GDP (2004 est.)

Budget:
revenues: $96.43 billion
expenditures: $91.95 billion including capital expenditures of NA (2004 est.)

Public debt:
46.8% of GDP (2004 est.)

Agriculture — products:
Barley, wheat, sugar beets, potatoes; dairy cattle; fish

Industries:
metals and metal products, electronics, machinery and scientific instruments, shipbuilding, pulp and paper, foodstuffs, chemicals, textiles, clothing

Industrial production growth rate:
2% (2004 est.)

Electricity — production:
71.59 billion kWh (2002 est.)

Electricity — consumption:
78.58 billion kWh (2002 est.)

Electricity — exports:
1.5 billion kWh (2002 est.)

Electricity — imports:
13.5 billion kWh (2002 est.)

Oil — production:
0 bbl/day (2001 est.)

Oil — consumption:
211,400 bbl/day (2001 est.)

Oil — exports:
101,000 bbl/day (2001 est.)

Oil — imports:
318,300 bbl/day (2001 est.)

Natural gas — production:
0 cu m (2001 est.)

Natural gas — consumption:
4.56 billion cu m (2001 est.)

Natural gas — exports:
0 cu m (2001 est.)

Natural gas — imports:
4.57 cu m (2001 est.)

Current account balance:
$11.39 billion (2004 est.)

Exports:
$61.04 billion (f.o.b. 2004 est.)

Exports — commodities:
machinery and equipment, chemicals, metals, timber, paper, pulp (1999 est.)

Exports — partners:
Sweden 11.1%, Germany 10.7%, Russia 8.9%, UK 7%, US 6.4%, Netherlands 5.1% (2004)

Imports:
$45.17 billion (f.o.b. 2004 est.)

Imports — commodities:
foodstuffs, petroleum and petroleum products, chemicals, transport equipment, iron and steel, machinery, textile yarn and fabrics, grains (1999 est.)

Imports — partners:
Germany 16.2%, Sweden 14.3%, Russia 12.8%, Netherland 6.3%, Denmark 5.2%, UK 4.6%, France 4.3% (2004)

Reserves of foreign exchange and gold:
$11.17 billion (2003 est.)

Debt — external:
$30 billion (December 1993 est.)

Economic aid — donor:
$379 million ODA (2001 est.)

Currency:
euro (EUR)
note: On 1 January 1999, the European Monetary Union introduced the euro as a common currency to be used by financial institutions of member countries; on 1 January 2002, the euro became the sole currency for everyday transactions within the member countries

Exchange rates:
euros per US$: 0.81 (2004 est.), 0.89 (2003 est.), 1.06 (2002 est.), 1.12 (2001 est.), 1.09 (2000 est.)

Fiscal year:
calendar year


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Washington D.C.: Central Intelligence Agency, 2005
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