PROFILE
OFFICIAL NAME:
Republic of Estonia
Geography
Area: 45,226 sq. km. (17,462 sq. mi.); about the
size of New Hampshire and Vermont.
Cities: Capital--Tallinn (pop. 397,150).
Other cities--Tartu (101,190); Narva
(67,752); Kohtla-Jarve (46,765); Parnu (44,781);
Viljandi (20,509). The last population census
was held in 2000.
Terrain: Flat, average elevation 50 m. Elevation
is slightly higher in the east and southeast.
Steep limestone banks and 1,520 islands mark the
coastline. Land use--9.5% arable land,
47,4% forest and woodland, 22% swamps and bogs,
21.5% other. Coastal waters are somewhat
polluted.
Climate: Temperate, with four seasons of
near-equal length. Annual precipitation averages
50-75 cm.
People
Nationality: Noun and adjective--Estonian(s).
Population: 1.332 million.
Annual growth rate: -0.65%. Birth rate--9.3/1,000.
Death rate--13.6/1,000. Migration--616
persons (1999). Density--30/sq. km.
Urban dwellers--70%.
Ethnic groups: Estonians 65%, Russians 28%,
Ukrainians 2.5%, Belarusians 1.4%, Finns 0.9%,
other 2.2%.
Religions: Lutheran; the Estonian Apostolic
Orthodox, subordinated to Constantinople; the
Estonian Orthodox, subordinated to the Moscow
Patriarchate; Baptist.
Languages: Estonian (official).
Education: Years compulsory--9.
Attendance--218,600 students at 550 schools,
plus 50,800 university students. Literacy--98.2%.
Health: Infant mortality rate--7.87
deaths/1,000 live births. Life expectancy--65
yrs. men, 76 yrs. women.
Work force: 704,500.
Government
Type: Parliamentary democracy.
Constitution: On June 28, 1992 Estonians
ratified a constitution based on the 1938 model,
offering legal continuity to the Republic of
Estonia prior to Soviet occupation.
Branches: Executive--president (chief of
state), elected by Parliament every 5 years;
prime minister (head of government).
Legislative--Riigikogu (Parliament--101
members, 4-year term). Judicial--Supreme
Court.
Administrative regions: 15 counties, 42 towns,
and 205 municipalities.
Political parties/coalitions: Estonian Center
Party--Chairman, Edgar Savisaar/Coalition;
Estonian Reform Party--Chairman, Andrus
Ansip/Coalition; Pro Patria Union--Chairman,
Mart Laar; Estonian People's Union--Chairman,
Villu Reiljan/Coalition; Moderates--Chairman,
Ivari Padar; Estonian United People's Party--Chairman,
Jevgeni Tomberg; Estonian Social Democratic
Labor Party--Chairman, Tiit Toomsalu;
Estonian Independence Party--Chairman, Vello
Leit; Res Publica--Chairman, Juhan Parts;
Estonian Christian People's Party--Chairman,
Aldo Vinkel; Russian Party in Estonia--Chairman,
Stanislav Cherepanov; Estonian Democratic
Party--Chairman, Jaan Laas; Republican
Party--Chairman, Kristjan-Olari Leping.
Suffrage: Universal at 18 years of age;
noncitizen residents may vote in municipal
elections.
Government budget: $2.3 billion.
Defense: 2% of GDP.
National holidays: Jan. 1 (New Year's Day), Feb.
24 (Independence Day), Good Friday, Easter
Sunday, May 1 (May Day), Whitsunday, June 23
(Victory Day--anniversary of Battle of Vonnu in
1919), June 24 (Midsummer Day), Aug. 20 (Day of
Restoration of Independence), Dec. 25 (Christmas
Day), Dec. 26 (Boxing Day).
Government of Estonia Web site: http://www.riik.ee/en/
Economy
GDP (2005 est.): $19.2 billion (World Bank).
Growth rate (2004): 6%.
Per capita GDP (2004): $14,500.
Inflation (2004): 3.0%.
Unemployment (2004): 9.6%.
Natural resources: Oil shale, phosphorite,
limestone, blue clay.
Agriculture (3% of 2001 GDP): Products--livestock
production (milk, meat, eggs) and crop
production (cereals and legumes, potatoes,
forage crops). Cultivable land--433,100
hectares.
Industry (26% of 2002 GDP): Types--engineering,
electronics, wood and wood products, and
textiles.
Services (70% of 2002 GDP): Transit, information
technology (IT), telecommunications.
Trade: Exports (2004)--$5.7 billion.
Partners--Finland 16.6%, Sweden 11.1%, U.K.
8.6%, Russia 6.9%, Latvia 7.4%, Germany 7.2%,
U.S. 5.5%, Lithuania 4%. Imports (2004)--$ 7.3
billion. Partners--Finland 20%, Germany 11%,
Russia 13%, Sweden 8%.
Exchange rate (2004): 12.5 kroon EEK=U.S.$1.
Foreign direct investment (June 2003): Sweden
39%, Finland 30%, Netherlands 6%, U.S. 7%,
Norway 3%, Denmark 2%, Germany 2%.
GEOGRAPHY
Between 57.3 and 59.5 latitude and 21.5 and 28.1
longitude, Estonia lies on the eastern shores of
the Baltic Sea on the level, northwestern part
of the rising East European platform. Average
elevation reaches only 50 meters (160 ft.).
The climate resembles New England's. Oil
shale and limestone deposits, along with
forests that cover 47% of the land, play key
economic roles in this generally resource-poor
country. Estonia boasts more than 1,500 lakes,
numerous bogs, and 3,794 kilometers of coastline
marked by numerous bays, straits, and inlets.
Tallinn's Muuga port offers one of Europe's
finest warmwater harbor facilities.
Estonia's strategic location has precipitated
many wars that were fought on its territory
between other rival powers at its expense. In
1944 the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics
(U.S.S.R.) granted Russia the trans-Narva and
Petseri regions on Estonia's eastern frontier.
Russia and Estonia signed a border treaty in
2005 recognizing the current border. Estonia
ratified the treaty in June 2005, but Russia has
not yet done so.
PEOPLE
The name "Eesti," or Estonia, is derived from
the word "Aestii," the name given by the ancient
Germans to the peoples living northeast of the
Vistula River. The Roman historian Tacitus in 98
A.D. was the first to mention the "Aestii"
people, and early Scandinavians called the land
south of the Gulf of Finland "Eistland," and the
people "eistr." Estonians belong to the
Balto-Finnic group of the Finno-Ugric peoples,
as do the Finns and Hungarians. Archaeological
research supports the existence of human
activity in the region as early as 8,000 BC but
by 3,500 BC the principal ancestors of the
Estonians had arrived from the east.
Estonians have strong ties to the Nordic
countries today stemming from strong cultural
and religious influences gained over centuries
during Scandinavian colonization and settlement.
This highly literate society places strong
emphasis upon education, which is free and
compulsory until age 16. The first book in
Estonian was printed in 1525. About 20% of the
population belongs to the following churches
registered in Estonia: Estonian Evangelical
Lutheran Church, Estonian Apostolic Orthodox
Church, Estonian Orthodox Church subordinated to
the Moscow Patriarchate, Baptist Church, Roman
Catholic Church, and others.
From 1945-1989 the percentage of ethnic
Estonians in Estonia dropped from 94% to 61%,
caused primarily by the Soviet program promoting
mass immigration of urban industrial workers
from Russia, Ukraine, and Belarus, as well as by
wartime emigration and Soviet premier Josif
Stalin's mass deportations and executions.
Written with the Latin alphabet, Estonian is
the language of the Estonian people and the
official language of the country. One-third of
the standard vocabulary is derived from adding
suffixes to root words. The oldest known
examples of written Estonian originate in 13th
century chronicles. During the Soviet era, the
Russian language was imposed for official use.
HISTORY
Estonians are one of the longest-settled
European peoples, whose forebears, known as the
"comb pottery" people, lived on the southeastern
shores of the Baltic Sea over 5,000 years ago.
Like other early agricultural societies,
Estonians were organized into economically
self-sufficient, male-dominated clans with few
differences in wealth or social power. By the
early Middle Ages most Estonians were small
landholders, with farmsteads primarily organized
by village. Estonian government remained
decentralized, with local political and
administrative subdivisions emerging only during
the first century A.D. By then, Estonia had a
population of more than 150,000 people and
remained the last corner of medieval Europe to
be Christianized.
In 1227 the German crusading order of the
Sword Brethren defeated the last Estonian
stronghold. The people were Christianized,
colonized, and enserfed. Despite attempts to
restore independence, Estonia was divided among
three domains, and small states were formed.
Tallinn joined the Hanseatic League in 1248.
Despite successful Russian raids and
invasions in 1481 and 1558, the local German
barons continued to rule Estonia and from 1524
preserved Estonian commitment to the Protestant
Reformation. Northern Estonia submitted to
Swedish control in 1561 during the Livonian
Wars, and in 1582-83 southern Estonia (Livonia)
became part of Poland's Duchy of Courland.
In 1625, mainland Estonia came entirely under
Swedish rule. In 1631, the Swedish king Gustav
II Adolf granted the peasantry greater autonomy,
opened the first known Estonian-language school
in Tallinn, and in 1632 established a printing
press and university in the city of Tartu.
Sweden's defeat by Russia in 1721 resulted in
the Uusikaupunki Peace Treaty, and Russian rule
was then imposed in what became modern Estonia.
Nonetheless, the legal system, Lutheran church,
local and town governments, and education
remained mostly German until the late 19th
century and partially until 1918.
By 1819, the Baltic provinces were the first
in the Russian empire in which serfdom was
abolished, allowing the peasants to own their
own land or move to the cities. These moves
created the economic foundation for the Estonian
national cultural awakening that had lain
dormant for some 600 years of foreign rule.
Estonia was caught in a current of national
awakening that began sweeping through Europe in
the mid-1800s.
A cultural movement sprang forth to adopt the
use of Estonian as the language of instruction
in schools, all-Estonian song festivals were
held regularly after 1869, and a national
literature in Estonian developed. Kalevipoeg,
Estonia's epic national poem, was published in
1861 in both Estonian and German.
As the 1905 revolution in Russia swept
through Estonia, the Estonians called for
freedom of the press and assembly, for universal
franchise, and for national autonomy. The
uprisings were brutally suppressed, and Estonian
gains were minimal, but the tense stability that
prevailed between 1905 and 1917 allowed
Estonians to advance the aspiration of national
statehood.
With the collapse of the Russian empire in
World War I, Russia's provisional government
granted national autonomy to Estonia. A
popularly elected assembly (Maapaev) was formed
but was quickly forced underground by opposing
extremist political forces. The Committee of
Elders of the underground Maapaev announced the
Republic of Estonia on February 24, 1918, 1 day
before German troops invaded. After the
withdrawal of German troops in November 1918,
fighting broke out between Bolshevik and
Estonian troops. On February 2, 1920, the Treaty
of Tartu was signed by the Republic of Estonia
and Soviet Russia. The terms of the treaty
stated that Soviet Russia renounced in
perpetuity all rights to the territory of
Estonia.
Independence lasted 22 years. Estonia
underwent a number of economic, social, and
political reforms necessary to come to terms
with its new status as a sovereign state.
Economically and socially, land reform in 1919
was the most important step. Large estate
holdings belonging to the Baltic nobility were
redistributed among the peasants and especially
among volunteers in the War of Independence.
Estonia's principal markets became Scandinavia,
Great Britain, and western Europe, with some
exports to the United States and Soviet Union.
The first constitution of the Republic of
Estonia, adopted in 1920, established a
parliamentary form of government. The Parliament
(Riigikogu) consisted of 100 members elected for
3-year terms. Between 1921 and 1931, Estonia had
11 governments. Konstantin Päts was installed as
the first President of the republic in 1938.
The independence period was one of great
cultural advancement. Estonian language schools
were established, and artistic life of all kinds
flourished. One of the more notable cultural
acts of the independence period, unique in
western Europe at the time of its passage in
1925, was a guarantee of cultural autonomy to
minority groups comprising at least 3,000
persons, and to Jews.
Estonia had pursued a policy of neutrality,
but the signing of the Molotov-Ribbentrop
Nonaggression Pact on August 23, 1939 signaled
the end of independence. The agreement provided
for the Soviet occupation of Estonia, Latvia,
Finland, and later, Lithuania, in return for
Nazi Germany's assuming control over most of
Poland. After extensive diplomatic intrigue, the
Estonian Socialist Republic (E.S.R.) was
proclaimed on July 21, 1940, 1 month after
Estonia was occupied by Soviet troops. The
E.S.R. was formally accepted into the Soviet
Union on August 6, and the official name of the
country became the Estonian Soviet Socialist
Republic (E.S.S.R.).
Soviet occupation was accompanied by
expropriation of property, Sovietization of
cultural life, and Stalinist communism
permeating political life. On June 14, 1941,
mass deportations took place simultaneously in
all three Baltic states. Officially, nothing was
said about the arrests, and no one was
prosecuted or sentenced.
When Nazi Germany attacked the Soviet Union
on June 22, 1941, most Estonians greeted the
Germans with relatively open arms and hoped to
restore independence. It soon became clear that
sovereignty was out of the question. Estonia
became a part of "Ostland." Massive repression
continued. About 5,500 Estonians died in
concentration camps.
In World War II Estonia suffered huge losses.
Ports were destroyed, and 45% of industry and
40% of the railways were damaged. Estonia's
population decreased by one-fifth (about 200,000
people). Some 10% of the population (more than
80,000 people) fled to the West between 1940 and
1944. More than 30,000 soldiers were killed in
battles. In 1944 Russian air raids destroyed
Narva, and one-third of the residential area in
Tallinn was destroyed. By late September 1944,
Soviet forces expelled the last German troops
from Estonia, ushering in a second phase of
Soviet rule. That year, Moscow also transferred
the Estonian Narva and Petseri border districts,
which held a large percentage of ethnic
Russians, to Russian control. In 1944, there
were massive arrests of people who had actively
supported the German occupation or been disloyal
to Soviet order.
An anti-Soviet guerrilla movement known as
"the Forest Brethren" developed in the
countryside, reaching its zenith in 1946-48. In
March 1949, 20,722 people (2.5% of population)
were deported to Siberia. By the beginning of
the 1950s, the occupying regime had suppressed
the resistance movement.
After the war the Communist Party of the
Estonian Soviet Socialist Republic (ECP) became
the preeminent organization in the republic. The
ethnic Estonian share in the total ECP
membership decreased from 90% in 1941 to 48% in
1952.
After Stalin's death, party membership vastly
expanded its social base to include more ethnic
Estonians. By the mid-1960s, the percentage of
ethnic Estonian membership stabilized near 50%.
On the eve of perestroika the ECP claimed about
100,000 members; less than half were ethnic
Estonians and comprised less than 2% of the
country's population.
A positive aspect of the post-Stalin era in
Estonia was a reopening in the late 1950s of
citizens' contacts with foreign countries. Ties
were reactivated with Finland, and in the 1960s,
Estonians began watching Finnish television.
This electronic "window on the West" afforded
Estonians more information on current affairs
and more access to Western culture and thought
than any other group in the Soviet Union. This
heightened media environment was important in
preparing Estonians for their vanguard role in
extending perestroika during the era of Soviet
President Mikhail Gorbachev.
In the late 1970s, Estonian society grew
increasingly concerned about the threat of
cultural Russification to the Estonian language
and national identity. By 1981, Russian was
taught in the first grade of Estonian language
schools and also was introduced into the
Estonian pre-school teaching.
By the beginning of the Gorbachev era,
concern over the cultural survival of the
Estonian people had reached a critical point.
The ECP remained stable in the early perestroika
years but waned in the late 1980s. Other
political movements, groupings, and parties
moved to fill the power vacuum. The first and
most important was the Estonian Popular Front,
established in April 1988 with its own platform,
leadership, and broad constituency. The Greens
and the dissident-led Estonian National
Independence Party soon followed. By 1989, the
political spectrum widened, and new parties were
formed and re-formed almost daily.
The republic's Supreme Soviet transformed
into an authentic regional lawmaking body. This
relatively conservative legislature passed an
early declaration of sovereignty (November
1988); a law on economic independence (May 1989)
confirmed by the U.S.S.R. Supreme Soviet that
November; a language law making Estonian the
official language (January 1989); and local and
republic election laws stipulating residency
requirements for voting and candidacy (August,
November 1989).
Although not all non-Estonians supported full
independence, they were divided in their goals
for the republic. In March 1990 some 18% of
Russian speakers supported the idea of a fully
independent Estonia, up from 7% the previous
autumn, and only a small group of Estonians were
opposed to full independence in early 1990.
Estonia held free elections for the 105-member
Supreme Soviet on March 18, 1990. All residents
of Estonia were eligible to participate in the
elections, including the approximately 50,000
Soviet troops stationed there. The Popular Front
coalition, composed of left and centrist parties
and led by former Central Planning Committee
official Edgar Savisaar, held a parliamentary
majority. In May 1990, the name of the Republic
of Estonia was restored, public use of the
symbols of the E.S.S.R. (anthem, flag, and coat
of arms) were forbidden, and only laws adopted
in Estonia were proclaimed valid.
Despite the emergence of the new lawmaking
body, an alternative legislature developed in
Estonia. In February 1990, a body known as the
Congress of Estonia was elected in unofficial
and unsanctioned elections. Supporters of the
Congress argued that the inter-war republic
continued to exist de jure: Since Estonia was
forcibly annexed by the U.S.S.R., only citizens
of that republic and their descendants could
decide Estonia's future.
Through a strict, nonconfrontational policy
in pursuing independence, Estonia managed to
avoid the violence which Latvia and Lithuania
incurred in the bloody January 1991 crackdowns
and in the border-customs post guard murders
that summer. During the August coup in the
U.S.S.R., Estonia was able to maintain constant
operation and control of its telecommunications
facilities, thereby offering the West a clear
view into the latest coup developments and
serving as a conduit for swift Western support
and recognition of Estonia's redeclaration of
independence on August 20, 1991. Following
Europe's lead, the United States formally
reestablished diplomatic relations with Estonia
on September 2, and the U.S.S.R. Supreme Soviet
offered recognition on September 6, 1991.
After more than 3 years of negotiations, on
August 31, 1994, the armed forces of the Russian
Federation withdrew from Estonia. Since
regaining independence Estonia has had 12
governments with 8 prime ministers: Edgar
Savisaar, Tiit Vähi, Mart Laar, Andres Tarand,
Mart Siimann, Siim Kallas, Juhan Parts, and
Andrus Ansip.
GOVERNMENT AND POLITICAL CONDITIONS
On June 28, 1992, Estonian voters approved the
constitutional assembly's draft constitution and
implementation act, which established a
parliamentary government with a president as
chief of state and with a government headed by a
prime minister.
The Riigikogu, a unicameral legislative body,
is the highest organ of state authority. It
initiates and approves legislation sponsored by
the prime minister. The prime minister has full
responsibility and control over his cabinet.
Parliamentary and presidential elections were
held on September 20, 1992. Approximately 68% of
the country's 637,000 registered voters cast
ballots. An outstanding writer and former
Minister of Foreign Affairs, Lennart Meri, won
on the first ballot and became President. He
chose 32-year-old historian and Christian
Democratic Party founder Mart Laar as Prime
Minister.
In February 1992, and with amendments in
January 1995, the Riigikogu renewed Estonia's
liberal 1938 citizenship law, which also
provides equal civil protection to resident
aliens.
In 1996, Estonia ratified a border agreement
with Latvia and completed work with Russia on a
technical border agreement. President Meri was
re-elected in free and fair indirect elections
in August and September 1996. During
parliamentary elections in 1999, the seats in
Riigikogu were divided as follows: the Center
Party received 28, the Pro Patria Union 18, the
Reform Party 18, the Moderates 17 seats. Pro
Patria Union, the Reform Party, and the
Moderates formed a government with Mart Laar as
Prime Minister whereas the Center Party with the
Coalition Party, People's Union, United People's
Party, and members of parliament who were not
members of factions formed the opposition in the
Riigikogu.
In the fall of 2001, Arnold Rüütel became the
President of the Republic of Estonia. In January
2002, Prime Minister Laar stepped down, and
President Ruutel appointed Siim Kallas the new
Prime Minister. The Reform Party and the Center
Party formed a new coalition government in power
as of January 28, 2002. Parliamentary elections
were held on March 2, 2003. A coalition
government comprised of the Res Publica, Reform,
and the Peoples' Union Parties took office in
April 2003. President Rüütel appointed Juhan
Parts of Res Publica as Prime Minister.
On March 24, 2005, the coalition government
led by Juhan Parts fell following passage of a
no confidence motion in the Riigikogu. Reform
Party Chairman Andrus Ansip became the new Prime
Minister on April 13, 2005, leading a coalition
of the Reform, Center, and People’s Union
parties.
Principal Government Officials
President--Arnold Rüütel
Prime Minister--Andrus Ansip (Reform)
Foreign Affairs--Urmas Paet (Reform)
Interior--Kalle Laanet (Center)
Social Affairs--Jaak Aab (Center)
Education-- Mailis Reps (Center)
Economy and Communications--Edgar Savisaar
(Center)
Justice--Rein Lang (Reform)
Defense--Jürgen Ligi (Reform)
Environment--Villu Reiljan (People's Union)
Agriculture--Ester Tuiksoo (People's Union)
Finance--Aivar Soerd (People’s Union)
Culture--Raivo Palmaru (Center Party)
Population Minister--Paul-Erik Rummo (Reform)
Minister of Regional Affairs--Jaan Õunapuu
(People's Union)
Riigikogu Chairman--Ene Ergma (Res Publica)
Estonia maintains an
embassy in
the United States at 2131 Massachusetts Avenue,
NW, Washington DC 20008 (tel: [1] (202)
588-0101; fax: [1] (202) 588-0108). It operates
a consulate at 600 Third Avenue, 26th Floor, New
York, NY 10016-2001 (tel: [1] (212) 883-0636;
fax: [1] (212) 883-0648).
ECONOMY
For centuries until 1920, Estonian agriculture
consisted of native peasants working large
feudal-type estates held by ethnic German
landlords. In the decades prior to 1918
independence, centralized czarist rule had
contributed a rather large industrial sector
dominated by the world's largest cotton mill, a
ruined postwar economy, and an inflated ruble
currency. In years 1920 to 1930, Estonia
entirely transformed its economy, despite
considerable hardship, dislocation, and
unemployment. Compensating the German landowners
for their holdings, the government confiscated
the estates and divided them into small farms
which subsequently formed the basis of Estonian
prosperity.
By 1929, a stable currency, the kroon (or
crown), was established. Trade focused on the
local market and the West, particularly Germany
and the United Kingdom. Only 3% of all commerce
was with the U.S.S.R.
The U.S.S.R.'s forcible annexation of Estonia
in 1940 and the ensuing Nazi and Soviet
destruction during World War II crippled the
Estonian economy. Postwar Sovietization of life
continued with the integration of Estonia's
economy and industry into the U.S.S.R.'s
centrally planned structure. More than 56% of
Estonian farms were collectivized in the month
of April 1949 alone. Moscow expanded on Estonian
industries that had locally available raw
materials, such as oil-shale mining and
phosphorites. As a laboratory for economic
experiments, especially in industrial management
techniques, Estonia enjoyed more success and
greater prosperity than other regions under
Soviet rule.
Since re-establishing independence in 1991,
Estonia has styled itself as the gateway between
East and West and aggressively pursued economic
reform and integration with the West. Estonia's
market reforms put it among the economic leaders
in the former Council for Mutual Economic
Assistance (COMECON) area. A balanced budget,
flat-rate income tax, free trade regime, fully
convertible currency, competitive commercial
banking sector, and hospitable environment for
foreign investment are hallmarks of Estonia's
free-market-based economy. Estonia also has made
excellent progress in regard to structural
adjustment.
The privatization of state-owned firms is
virtually complete, with only the port and the
main power plants remaining in government hands.
The constitution requires a balanced budget, and
the protection afforded by Estonia's
intellectual property laws is on a par with that
of Europe's. In early 1992 both liquidity
problems and structural weakness stemming from
the communist era precipitated a banking crisis.
As a result, effective bankruptcy legislation
was enacted, and privately owned, well-managed
banks emerged as market leaders. Today,
near-ideal conditions for the banking sector
exist. Foreigners are not restricted from buying
bank shares or acquiring majority holdings.
Tallinn's fully electronic Stock Exchange
opened in early 1996 and was bought out by
Finland's Helsinki Stock Exchange in 2001. It is
estimated that the unregistered economy provides
almost 12% of annual gross domestic product
(GDP).
Estonia is nearly energy independent,
supplying more than 90% of its electricity needs
with locally mined oil shale. Alternative energy
sources such as wood, peat, and biomass make up
about 9% of primary energy production. Estonia
imports needed petroleum products from western
Europe and Russia. Oil shale energy,
telecommunications, textiles, chemical products,
banking, services, food and fishing, timber,
shipbuilding, electronics, and transportation
are key sectors of the economy. The ice-free
port of Muuga, near Tallinn, is a modern
facility featuring good transshipment
capability, a high-capacity grain elevator,
chill/frozen storage, and brand-new oil tanker
off-loading capabilities. The railroad,
privatized by an international consortium in
2000, serves as a conduit between the West,
Russia, and other points to the east.
Estonia still faces challenges. Agricultural
privatization has caused severe problems for
farmers needing collateral to be eligible for
loans. The income differential between Tallinn
and the rest of the country is widening.
Standards of living have eroded for the large
portion of the population on fixed pensions. The
formerly industrial northeast section of Estonia
is undergoing a severe economic depression as a
result of plant closings.
During recent years the Estonian economy has
continued to grow. Estonian GDP grew by 6.5% in
2001 and by 6.0% in 2002. Inflation declined
modestly to 4.2% in 2001; for 2002 the inflation
rate was 2.7%. The unemployment rate in 2002 was
10.6%. Estonia joined the World Trade
Organization in 1999. Estonia concluded European
Union (EU) accession negotiations in December
2002 and signed the EU Accession Treaty in April
2003. In a September 2003 referendum, Estonian
citizens voted to amend their constitution and
join the European Union. Estonia formally joined
the EU on May 1, 2004, one of 10 states, mostly
from eastern Europe, to join the Union on that
date. While the effects of EU membership will
not be measurable in the short term, membership
will likely have a positive influence on
Estonia's gross domestic product, exports of
goods and services, and the inflow of foreign
investment.
Foreign Trade
Estonia's liberal foreign trade regime, which
contains few tariff or nontariff barriers, is
nearly unique in Europe. Estonia also boasts a
national currency that is freely convertible at
a fixed exchange rate, and conservative fiscal
and monetary policies.
Estonia's business attitude toward the United
States is positive, and business relations
between the United States and Estonia are
increasing significantly. The primary
competition for American companies in the
Estonian marketplace is European suppliers,
especially Finnish and Swedish companies.
Total U.S. exports to Estonia in 2002 were
$164 million, forming 3% of total Estonian
imports. In 2002 the principal imports from the
United States were meat and edible meat offal,
poultry, boilers, and other electrical machinery
and transmission/recording apparatus for
radio/TV. The May 2004 round of EU expansion is
likely to yield, over time, positive benefits
for U.S. business. However, Estonia's membership
is disadvantageous for certain U.S. exports to
Estonia. For example, since January 2000 Estonia
has imposed import tariffs on certain
agricultural products from third countries,
including the United States, in accordance with
EU rules and regulations.
Estonia, being a small country of 1.4 million
people, relies on its greatest natural
asset--its location at the crossroads of East
and West. Estonia lies just south of Finland and
across the Baltic Sea from Sweden, both EU
members. To the east are the huge potential
markets of northwest Russia. Having been a
member of the former Soviet Union, Estonians
know how to do business in Russia and in other
former Soviet countries. Estonia's modern
transportation and communication links provide a
safe and reliable bridge for trade with former
Soviet Union and Nordic countries. According to
the RIPE Network Coordination Centre (www.ripe.net),
Estonia has the highest Internet-connected
hosts/population ratio in central and eastern
Europe and also is ahead of most other EU
countries. Latest surveys indicate that 41% of
the Estonian population regard themselves as
Internet users.
Country Commercial Guides are available for
U.S. exporters from the National Trade Data
Bank's CD-ROM or via the Internet. Please
contact STAT-USA at 1-800-STAT-USA for more
information. Country Commercial Guides can be
accessed via the World Wide Web at the U.S.
Department of Commerce's
site.
They also can be ordered in hard copy or on
diskette from the National Technical Information
Service (NTIS) at 1-800-553-NTIS. U.S. exporters
seeking general export information/assistance
and country-specific commercial information
should contact the U.S. Department of Commerce,
Trade Information Center by phone at
1-800-USA-TRAD(E) or by fax at 1-202-482-4473.
DEFENSE
Estonia achieved its main security and defense
policy objective by accepting a formal
invitation at Prague in November 2002 to join
the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO)
Alliance. Accession to NATO has been included in
all coalition agreements of all Estonian
governments since the 1991 restoration of
independence, including the present government.
The same objective also is stated in the
National Security Concept of the Republic of
Estonia, approved by the Parliament in March
2001. Estonia officially became a member of the
North Atlantic Treaty Organization on March 29,
2004 after depositing its instruments of treaty
ratification in Washington, DC.
The 2003 state budget allocated 2% of GDP for
defense expenditures. The United States is among
the countries with which Estonia has very
intensive cooperation in the defense and
security field.
FOREIGN RELATIONS
Estonia is a party to 181 international
organizations, including Bank for International
Settlements (BIS), Council of the Baltic Sea
States (CBSS), Customs Cooperation Council
(CCC), Council of Europe (CE), Euro-Atlantic
Partnership Council (EAPC), European Bank for
Reconstruction and Development (EBRD), Economic
Commission for Europe (ECE), European Union
(EU), Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO),
International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA),
International Bank for Reconstruction and
Development (IBRD, or World Bank), International
Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO),
International Confederation of Free Trade Unions
(ICFTU), International Red Cross and Red
Crescent Movement (ICRM), International Finance
Corporation (IFC), International Federation of
Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRCS),
International Hydrographic Organization (IHO),
International Labor Organization (ILO),
International Monetary Fund (IMF), International
Maritime Organization (IMO), International
Criminal Police Organization (Interpol),
International Olympic Committee (IOC),
International Organization for Migration (IOM,
observer), International Organization for
Standardization (ISO, correspondent),
International Telecommunication Union (ITU),
Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical
Weapons (OPCW), Organization for Security and
Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), Partnership for
Peace (PFP), United Nations (UN), United Nations
Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD),
United Nations Educational, Scientific, and
Cultural Organization (UNESCO), United Nations
Mission in Bosnia and Herzegovina (UNMIBH),
United Nations Interim Administration Mission in
Kosovo (UNMIK), United Nations Truce Supervision
Organization (UNTSO), Universal Postal Union
(UPU), Western European Union (WEU, associate
partner), World Health Organization (WHO), World
Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO), World
Meteorological Organization (WMO), World Trade
Organization (WTO).
U.S.-ESTONIA RELATIONS
The relationship between Estonia and the United
States of America has been constant and strong
since Estonia first became independent. Because
of its global political and economic influence,
the United States is one of Estonia's most
important partners.
The United States recognized the Republic of
Estonia on July 28, 1922. The first Estonian
diplomatic mission in the United States was
opened in the same year. It continued its
activities throughout the period of illegal
occupation by the Soviet Union from 1940 to
1991. U.S. authorities recognized Estonia's
diplomatic mission as a legal representative of
the Republic of Estonia. Indeed, the recognition
of the legal continuity of the Republic of
Estonia has been the cornerstone of
Estonian-U.S. relations.
The U.S. reopened its Embassy in Tallinn on
September 4, 1991, soon after the restoration of
Estonia's de facto independence on August 20,
1991. Relations between the two countries have
since developed at a rapid pace.
The U.S. Ambassador to Estonia is Aldona
Zofia Wos. Mr. Jüri Luik has been Estonia's
Ambassador to the United States since September
2003. Estonia also is represented in the United
States by a Consulate General in New York and
three Honorary Consuls: Jaak Treiman in Los
Angeles, Mart Kask in Seattle, and Scott E.
Schul in Maine.
U.S.-Baltic Charter
The Presidents of the United States, Estonia,
Latvia, and Lithuania signed the
U.S.-Baltic Charter in Washington on January
16, 1998. The main goals of this charter are to
support Estonia's, Latvia's, and Lithuania's
full integration into European and transatlantic
structures, and to establish the general
principles and aims for cooperation. The charter
underlines the importance of political, defense,
security, and economic cooperation. It is a
statement of the United States' real, profound,
and enduring interest in the security and
independence of the Baltic states.
The U.S. commitment toward the Baltic and
Nordic states has been reaffirmed with the
articulation of the
Enhanced Partnership in Northern Europe (e-PINE) in
October 2003. E-PINE recognizes the progress
made in the region over the preceding decade as
well as the challenges that remain, both in the
region and with states beyond the borders of an
expanding EU and NATO. E-PINE seeks to build on
past success and existing habits of multilateral
cooperation in the region. Through e-PINE, the
United States is engaging all eight Nordic and
Baltic states on a shared agenda that focuses on
three areas: political security; healthy
societies and healthy neighbors; and vibrant
economies. To carry out this coordination,
e-PINE includes a forum for "8 plus 1"
cooperation as well as contacts among the states
at the working level.
E-PINE represents the evolution of the
previous guiding U.S. policy, the
Northern Europe Initiative (NEI). NEI,
launched in 1997, promoted regional cooperation
in northern Europe as a way of further
integrating the Baltic states and northwest
Russia and of strengthening our relations with
the Nordic countries. NEI programs addressed key
problems in Estonia and its neighbors--including
HIV/AIDS, environmental pollution, corruption,
and social integration--and built cross-border
linkages to contribute to stability and
security.
Principal U.S. Officials
Ambassador--Aldona
Zofia Wos
Deputy Chief of Mission--Jeffery Goldstein
Head of Political/Economic Section--Stuart Dwyer
Management Officer--Thatcher Scharpf
Legal Attaché--James Nixon
Consular Officer--Rodger Deuerlein
Public Affairs Officer--Eric Johnson
Defense Attaché--Commander Karin Shuey (USN)
Chief of Office of Defense Cooperation--LTC
Kenneth Pope
The
U.S. Embassy in Estonia is located at
Kentmanni 20, Tallinn [tel. (372) 66 88 100].