YEMEN (ADEN) (Continued)
Suffrage: granted by constitution to all citizens 18 and over
Elections: elections for legislative body, Supreme Peopled Council, called for in constitution; none have been held
Political parties and leaders: Yemeni Socialist Party (YSP), the only legal party, is coalition of National Front, Ba'th, and Communist Parties
Communists: unknown number
Member of: Arab League, FAO, G-77, GATT (de facto), IBRD, ICAO, IDA, IFAD, ILO, IMCO, IMF, ISCON, ITU, NAM, UN, UNESCO, UPU, WHO, WMO, WTO
ECONOMY
GNP: $792 million (1978 est.), $430 per capita
Agriculture (all outside Aden): cotton is main cash crop; cereals, dates, kat (qat), coffee, and livestock are raised and there is a growing fishing industry; large amount of food must be imported (particularly for Aden); cotton, hides, skins, dried and salted fish are exported
Major industries: petroleum refinery at Little Aden operates on imported crude; 1981 output about one-half of rated capacity of 170,000 b/d; oil exploration activity
Electric power: 142,100 kW capacity (1980); 349 million kWh produced (1980), 181 kWh per capita
Exports: $44.3 million (1979), excluding petroleum products but including re-exports
Imports: $391.0 million (f.o.b., 1979)
Major trade partners: Yemen, East Africa, but some cement and sugar imported from Communist countries; crude oil imported from Persian Gulf, exports mainly to UK and Japan
Budget: (1979) total receipts $423 million, current expenditures $209 million, development expenditures $214 million
Monetary conversion rate: 1 S. Yemeni dinar=US$2.90
Official foreign reserves: $800 million (December 1981)
Fiscal year: calendar year
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: none
Highways: 5,311 km total; 322 km bituminous treated, 290 km crushed stone and gravel, 4,699 km motorable track
Pipelines: refined products, 32 km
Ports: 1 major (Aden)
Civil air: 14 major transport aircraft, 1 leased in
Airfields: 98 total, 52 usable; 5 with permanent-surface runways; 10 with runways 2,440-3,659 m, 25 with runways 1,220-2,439 m
Telecommunications: small system of open-wire, tropo-scatter multiconductor cable, and radiocommunications stations; only center Aden; estimated 10,000 telephones (0.6 per 100 popl.); 1 AM, no FM, and 5 TV stations
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 428,000; 238,000 fit for military service
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December 1977, $56 million; about 22.4% of central government budget
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