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Dominican Republic Facts and Figures from Encarta Go to article
Basic Facts
Official name Dominican Republic
Capital Santo Domingo
Area 48,400 sq km
18,700 sq mi
Dominican Republic: Flag and Anthem
Dominican Republic: Flag and Anthem
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People
Population 9,650,054 (2009 estimate)
Population growth
Population growth rate 1.49 percent (2009 estimate)
Projected population in 2025 11,922,144 (2009 estimate)
Projected population in 2050 14,657,962 (2009 estimate)
Population density 200 persons per sq km (2009 estimate)
517 persons per sq mi (2009 estimate)
Urban/rural distribution
Share urban 60 percent (2005 estimate)
Share rural 40 percent (2005 estimate)
Largest cities, with population
Santo Domingo 2,302,759 (2006 estimate)
Santiago 908,250 (2006)
La Vega 220,279 (2002)
San Pedro de MacorĂ­s 217,141 (2002)
San Francisco de MacorĂ­s 156,267 (2002)
Ethnic groups
Mixed 73 percent
White 16 percent
Black 11 percent
Languages
Spanish (official), French creole, English
Religious affiliations
Roman Catholic 89 percent
Protestant 4 percent
Indigenous beliefs 2 percent
Other 5 percent
Health and Education
Life expectancy
Total 73.7 years (2009 estimate)
Female 75.6 years (2009 estimate)
Male 71.9 years (2009 estimate)
Infant mortality rate 26 deaths per 1,000 live births (2009 estimate)
Literacy rate
Total 89.1 percent (2007 estimate)
Female 89.5 percent (2007 estimate)
Male 88.8 percent (2007 estimate)
Economy
Gross domestic product (GDP, in U.S.$) $36.7 billion (2007)
GDP per capita (U.S.$) $3,772.10 (2007)
GDP by economic sector
Agriculture, forestry, fishing 12 percent (2007)
Industry 27.7 percent (2007)
Services 60.3 percent (2007)
Monetary unit
1 Dominican peso (RD$), consisting of 100 centavos
Major trade partners for exports
United States, Netherlands, Belgium, France, and Haiti
Major trade partners for imports
United States, Venezuela, Mexico, Japan, and Spain
Sources
Basic Facts and People sections
Area data are from the statistical bureaus of individual countries. Population, population growth rate, and population projections are from the United States Census Bureau, International Programs Center, International Data Base (IDB) (www.census.gov). Urban and rural population data are from the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) of the United Nations (UN), FAOSTAT database (www.fao.org). Largest cities population data and political divisions data are from the statistical bureaus of individual countries. Ethnic divisions and religion data are largely from the latest Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) World Factbook and from various country censuses and reports. Language data are largely from the Ethnologue, Languages of the World, Summer Institute of Linguistics International (www.sil.org).
Health and Education section
Life expectancy and infant mortality data are from the United States Census Bureau, International Programs Center, International database (IDB) (www.census.gov). Population per physician and population per hospital bed data are from the World Health Organization (WHO) (www.who.int). Education data are from the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) database (www.unesco.org).
Economy section
Gross domestic product (GDP), GDP per capita, GDP by economic sectors, employment, and national budget data are from the World Bank database (www.worldbank.org). Monetary unit, agriculture, mining, manufacturing, exports, imports, and major trade partner information is from the statistical bureaus of individual countries, latest Europa World Yearbook, and various United Nations and International Monetary Fund (IMF) publications.
Note
Figures may not total 100 percent due to rounding.
© 2009 Microsoft