Basic Facts
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Full
country name: Republic
of Panama GDP:
US$21 billion |
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| Panama, republic in Central America, located on the narrow
strip of land that connects North and South America. Its position between
two continents and separating two oceans has played a defining role in
Panama's history and the livelihoods of its people.
Panama is crossed by mountain ranges, covered with large areas of rain
forest, and bounded by two long coastlines studded with islands and
bays. At several places it spans less than a hundred miles from its
Atlantic coastline to its Pacific shores. Most of its people and economic
activity are located in the central region surrounding the Panama Canal,
the major waterway that has played a decisive role in the country's
history. Panama City, the capital and largest city, is on the Pacific
coast in this central zone. The nation's diverse population is largely
of mixed Spanish, black, and Native American descent, but includes indigenous
people and immigrants from many parts of the world. As a land bridge between two continents, Panama developed plant and animal life more diverse than almost anywhere else on Earth. Prehistoric inhabitants of the Americas crossed Panama to reach South America and continued to migrate back and forth, sharing trade goods and culture and using the rich natural resources of the isthmus. The earliest Europeans to explore Panama recognized its value as a link between the Atlantic and Pacific oceans. For two centuries, Spain used Panama as a major commercial center in its American colonies, shipping trade goods and African slaves to Peru and thousands of tons of silver and gold to Spain. In the 17th century Panama handled a significant share of world trade. By the 19th century, new technologies and machinery, such as steam-powered shovels and trains, steel, and reinforced concrete, made it possible to attempt to fulfill a longtime European dream of building a canal across Panama. In the 1880s a French company lost a fortune and thousands of lives trying unsuccessfully to dig a sea-level canal. In 1903 the United States government helped Panama, then a province of Colombia, to become an independent nation. The United States then acquired permission from the new republic to build a canal. The Panama Canal, completed in 1914, represented a great engineering achievement. But a controversial treaty gave the United States control over the canal and important segments of Panama's territory and economy. This prevented Panamanians from controlling a facility they considered crucial for their well-being and national development. Much of modern Panama's history centers on the struggle of its people to benefit from the Panama Canal and the lands through which it passed, the Panama Canal Zone. While pursuing that goal, Panama developed its own unique culture and
system of government and built an economy that did not depend solely
on the canal. Issues concerning the canal caused tension with the United
States through much of the 20th century. In the 1970s new treaties brought
Panama's goal of controlling the canal, and its own destiny, within
reach. Under these agreements, Panama took possession of the Panama
Canal on December 31, 1999. Other conflicts between Panama's government
and the United States, however, led to a U.S. invasion in 1989 to overthrow
the dictatorship of Manuel Antonio Noriega. |
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