PROFILE
OFFICIAL NAME:
Commonwealth of The Bahamas
Geography
Area: 13,939 sq. km. (5,382 sq. mi.); slightly
larger than Connecticut and Rhode Island
combined.
Cities: Capital--Nassau, New
Providence. Second-largest city--Freeport,
Grand Bahama.
Terrain: Low and flat.
Climate: Semitropical.
People
Nationality: Noun and adjective--Bahamian(s).
Population (2003): 317,000.
Annual growth rate (2003): 1.1%.
Ethnic groups: African 85%, European 12%, Asian
and Hispanic 3%.
Religions: Baptist (32%), Roman Catholic,
Anglican, Evangelical Protestants, Methodist,
Church of God, Rastafarian, Traditional African.
Language: English (official); Creole.
Education (2003): Years compulsory--through
age 16. Attendance--92%.
Literacy--95.5%.
Health (2003): Infant mortality rate--11.0/1,000.
Life expectancy--69.8 years.
Work force (2004): 176,330; majority employed in
the tourism, government, and financial services
sectors.
Government
Type: Constitutional parliamentary democracy.
Independence: July 10, 1973.
Branches: Executive--British monarch
(nominal head of state), governor general
(representative of the British monarch), prime
minister (head of government), and cabinet.
Legislative--bicameral Parliament
(40-member elected House of Assembly, 16-member
appointed Senate). Judicial--Privy
Council in U.K., Court of Appeal, Supreme Court,
and magistrates' courts.
Political parties: Free National Movement (FNM),
Progressive Liberal Party (PLP), Coalition for
Democratic Reform (CDR).
Suffrage (2002): Universal over 18; 144,758
registered voters.
Economy
GDP (2004): $5.7 billion.
Growth rate (2004): 3%.
Per capita GDP (2004): $17,883.
Natural resources: Salt, aragonite, timber.
Tourism (2004): 40% of GDP.
Government spending (2004): 20% of GDP.
Financial services (2004): 15% of GDP.
Construction (2004; 10% of GDP): Products--largely
tourism related.
Manufacturing (2004; 8% of GDP): Products--pharmaceuticals,
rum.
Agriculture and fisheries (2004; 3% of GDP):
Products--fruits, vegetables, lobster,
fish.
Trade (2004): Exports ($469.3
million)--salt, aragonite, chemicals, fishing,
fruits, vegetables, beverages. Markets by
main destination--U.S. (77.5%), E.U.
(17.8%), Canada (1.6%), Mexico (0.4%).
Imports ($1.82 billion)--foodstuffs and
manufactured goods; vehicles and automobile
parts; hotel, restaurant, and medical supplies;
computers and electronics. Suppliers by main
origin--U.S. (83.3%), Venezuela (5.5%),
Netherlands Antilles (2.6%), E.U. (2.1%), Japan
(1.2%).
PEOPLE
Eighty-five percent of the Bahamian population
is of African heritage. About two-thirds of the
population reside on New Providence Island (the
location of Nassau). Many ancestors arrived in
the Bahama Islands when the islands served as a
staging area for the slave trade in the early
1800s. Others accompanied thousands of British
loyalists who fled the American colonies during
the Revolutionary War.
Haitians form the largest immigrant community
in The Bahamas. 30,000 - 50,000 are estimated to
be resident legally or illegally, concentrated
on New Providence, Abaco and Eleuthera islands.
School attendance is compulsory between the
ages of 5 and 16. The government fully operates
158 of the 210 primary and secondary schools in
The Bahamas. The other 52 schools are privately
operated. Enrollment for state primary and
secondary schools is 50,332, with more than
16,000 students attending private schools. The
College of The Bahamas, established in Nassau in
1974, provides programs leading to bachelors and
associates degrees. Several non-Bahamian
colleges also offer higher education programs in
The Bahamas.
HISTORY
In 1492, Christopher Columbus made his first
landfall in the Western Hemisphere in The
Bahamas. Spanish slave traders later captured
native Lucayan Indians to work in gold mines in
Hispaniola, and within 25 years, all Lucayans
perished. In 1647, a group of English and
Bermudan religious refugees, the Eleutheran
Adventurers, founded the first permanent
European settlement in The Bahamas and gave
Eleuthera Island its name. Similar groups of
settlers formed governments in The Bahamas until
the islands became a British Crown Colony in
1717.
The late 1600s to the early 1700s were the
golden age for pirates and privateers. Many
famous pirates--including Sir Francis Drake and
Blackbeard--used the islands of The Bahamas as a
base. The numerous islands and islets with their
complex shoals and channels provided excellent
hiding places for the plundering ships near
well-traveled shipping lanes. The first Royal
Governor, a former pirate named Woodes Rogers,
brought law and order to The Bahamas in 1718
when he expelled the buccaneers.
During the American Revolution, American
colonists loyal to the British flag settled in
The Bahamas. These Loyalists and new settlers
from Britain brought Colonial building skills
and agricultural expertise. Until 1834, when
Britain abolished slavery, they also brought
slaves, importing the ancestors of many modern
Bahamians from Western Africa.
Proximity to the U.S. continued to provide
opportunity for illegal shipping activity. In
the course of the American Civil War, The
Bahamas prospered as a center of Confederate
blockade-running. During Prohibition, the
islands served as a base for American
rumrunners. Today, the Bahamas is a major
transshipment point for narcotics on the way to
the U.S.
Bahamians achieved self-government through a
series of constitutional and political steps,
attaining internal self-government in 1964 and
full independence within the Commonwealth on
July 10, 1973. Since independence, The Bahamas
has continued to develop into a major tourist
and financial services center.
GOVERNMENT AND POLITICAL CONDITIONS
The Bahamas is an independent member of the
Commonwealth of Nations. It is a parliamentary
democracy with regular elections. As a
Commonwealth country, its political and legal
traditions closely follow those of the United
Kingdom. The Bahamas recognizes the British
monarch as its formal head of state, while an
appointed Governor General serves as the Queen's
representative in The Bahamas. A bicameral
legislature enacts laws under the 1973
constitution.
The House of Assembly consists of 40 members,
elected from individual constituencies for
5-year terms. As under the Westminster system,
the government may dissolve the Parliament and
call elections at any time. The House of
Assembly performs all major legislative
functions. The leader of the majority party
serves as prime minister and head of government.
The Cabinet consists of at least nine members,
including the prime minister and ministers of
executive departments. They answer politically
to the House of Assembly.
The Senate consists of 16 members appointed
by the Governor General, including nine on the
advice of the prime minister, four on the advice
of the Leader of the Opposition, and three on
the advice of the prime minister after
consultation with the Leader of the Opposition.
The Governor General appoints the Chief
Justice of the Supreme Court on the advice of
the prime minister and the Leader of the
Opposition. The Governor General appoints the
other justices with the advice of a judicial
commission. The Privy Council of the United
Kingdom serves as the highest appellate court.
Local government districts elect councils for
town planning, business licenses, traffic issues
and maintaining government buildings. In some
large districts, lower level town councils also
have minor responsibilities.
For decades, the white-dominated United
Bahamian Party (UBP) ruled The Bahamas, then a
dependency of the United Kingdom, while a group
of influential white merchants, known as the
"Bay Street Boys," dominated the local economy.
In 1953, Bahamians dissatisfied with UBP rule
formed the opposition Progressive Liberal Party
(PLP). Under the leadership of Lynden Pindling,
the PLP won control of the government in 1967
and led The Bahamas to full independence in
1973.
A coalition of PLP dissidents and former UBP
members formed the Free National Movement (FNM)
in 1971. Former PLP cabinet minister and member
of Parliament Hubert Ingraham became leader of
the FNM in 1990, upon the death of Sir Cecil
Wallace-Whitfield. Under the leadership of
Ingraham, the FNM won control of the government
from the PLP in the August 1992 general
elections. The FNM won again in March 1997. In
the general elections held in May 2002 the FNM
was turned out of power by the PLP, led by Perry
Christie, which won 29 of the 40 seats in the
House of Assembly.
Principal Government Officials
Governor General--Arthur Dion Hanna, Sr.
Prime Minister--Perry Christie
Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of National
Security--Cynthia Pratt
Minister of Foreign Affairs and the Public
Service--Fred Mitchell
Ambassador to the United States and to the
OAS--Joshua Sears
Ambassador to the United Nations--Paulette
Bethel
Consul General, Miami--Alma Adams
Consul General, New York--Eldred Bethel
The Bahamas maintains an embassy in the United
States at 2220 Massachusetts Ave., NW,
Washington, DC 20008 (tel: 202-319-2660/7) and
Consulates General in New York at 231 East 46th
Street, New York, NY 10017 (tel:
212-421-6925/6420), and in Miami at Suite 818,
Ingraham Building, 25 SE Second Ave., Miami, FL
33131 (tel: 305-373-6295/96).
ECONOMY
The Bahamas is driven by tourism and financial
services. Tourism provides an estimated 40% of
the gross domestic product (GDP), with an
additional 10% of GDP resulting from
tourist-driven construction. Tourism employs
about half the Bahamian work force. In 2004,
more than 5 million tourists visited The
Bahamas, 87% from the United States. There are
about 110 U.S.-affiliated businesses operating
in The Bahamas, and most are associated with
tourism and banking. With few domestic resources
and little industry, The Bahamas imports nearly
all its food and manufactured goods from the
United States. American goods and services tend
to be favored by Bahamians due to cultural
similarities and heavy exposure to American
advertising. The Bahamian economy, due to its
heavy dependence on U.S. tourism and trade, is
deeply affected by U.S. economic performance.
Following economic struggles in 2001-02
fueled by a drop in tourism after September 11,
2001, the current government has presided over a
period of economic recovery and an upturn in
large-scale private sector investments in
tourism, which will boost construction and
provide long-term employment. Future goals
include developing tourism properties on the
Family Islands, expanding of ship-repair
facilities and encouraging film production
facilities on Grand Bahama Island.
Economic challenges facing the Bahamas
include meeting continued employment demands,
jumpstarting a lagging privatization process,
and monitoring increasing levels of government
debt. Another major challenge for Bahamians will
be to prepare for hemispheric free trade.
Currently, Bahamians do not pay income or sales
taxes. Most government revenue is derived from
high tariffs and import fees. Reduction of trade
barriers will probably require some form of
taxation to replace revenues when the country
becomes a part of the Free Trade Area of the
Americas (FTAA). As evident by domestic
opposition to the Caribbean Single Market
Economy (CSME), the advantages of free trade may
be hard for the government to sell.
Two major hotel projects promise to increase
economic growth and create short- and long-term
employment. The Atlantis Resort and Casino on
Paradise Island is in the third phase of a
billion-dollar expansion expected to create
3,000 new jobs. A second $1.2 billion hotel
resort development project is planned for the
Cable Beach area of Nassau. The Baha Mar Company
has negotiated purchase of three major hotels
and a development site, including the last
assets of the state-owned Hotel Corporation. As
a condition of these large-scale investments,
the government promises to expand Nassau
International Airport. The Bahamian Government
also has adopted a proactive approach to
courting foreign investors and has conducted
major investment missions to the Far East,
Europe, Latin America, and Canada. The
government paid particular attention to China in
2004-05, making multiple trips to China to
encourage tourism and investment.
Financial services constitute the second-most
important sector of the Bahamian economy,
accounting for up to 15% of GDP, due to the
country's status as a tax haven and offshore
banking center. As of 2005, the government had
licensed 262 banks and trust companies in The
Bahamas. The Bahamas promulgated the
International Business Companies (IBC) Act in
January 1990 to enhance the country's status as
a leading financial center. The act served to
simplify and reduce the cost of incorporating
offshore companies in The Bahamas. Within 9
years, more than 84,000 IBC-type companies had
been established. In February 1991, the
government also legalized the establishment of
Asset Protection Trusts in The Bahamas. In 2000,
in response to multilateral organizations'
concerns, the government passed a legislative
package of stronger measures to better regulate
the financial sector and prevent money
laundering in the country's banking sector,
including creation of a Financial Intelligence
Unit and enforcement of "know-your-customer"
rules. Some of these measures have been
challenged in Bahamian courts, and the number of
offshore banks registered in the Bahamas has
declined by 50 since 2002. As many as half of
the IBCs have also closed shop. As a result, the
government is considering additional legislation
to keep the industry competitive while complying
with international standards, including possible
reform of the regulatory structure.
Agriculture and fisheries together account
for 3% of GDP. The Bahamas exports lobster and
some fish but does not raise these items
commercially. There is no large-scale
agriculture, and most agricultural products are
consumed domestically. Following an outbreak of
citrus canker on Abaco in 2005, The Bahamas lost
a main agricultural export, and the Ministry of
Agriculture banned the export of plant materials
from Abaco. The Bahamas imports more than $250
million in foodstuffs per year, representing
about 80% of its food consumption. The
government aims to expand food production to
reduce imports and generate foreign exchange. It
actively seeks foreign investment aimed at
increasing agricultural exports, particularly
specialty food items. The government officially
lists beef and pork production and processing,
fruits and nuts, dairy production, winter
vegetables, and mariculture (shrimp farming) as
the areas in which it wishes to encourage
foreign investment.
The Bahamian Government maintains the value
of the Bahamian dollar on a par with the U.S.
dollar. The Bahamas is a beneficiary of the
U.S.-Caribbean Basin Trade Partnership Act (CBTPA),
Canada's CARIBCAN program, and the European
Union's Lome IV Agreement. Although The Bahamas
participates in the political aspects of the
Caribbean Community (CARICOM), it has not
entered into joint economic initiatives, like
the CSME, with other Caribbean states.
The Bahamas has a few notable industrial
firms: the Freeport pharmaceutical firm, PFC
Bahamas (formerly Syntex), which recently
streamlined its production and was purchased by
the Swiss pharmaceutical firm Roche; the BORCO
oil facility, also in Freeport, which transships
oil in the region; the Commonwealth Brewery in
Nassau, which produces Heineken, Guinness, and
Kalik beers; and Bacardi Corp., which distills
rum in Nassau for shipment to U.S. and European
markets. Other industries include sun-dried sea
salt in Great Inagua, a wet dock facility in
Freeport for repair of cruise ships, and mining
of aragonite--a type of limestone with several
industrial uses--from the sea floor at Ocean
Cay.
The Hawksbill Creek Agreement established a
duty-free zone in Freeport, The Bahamas'
second-largest city, with a nearby industrial
park to encourage foreign industrial investment.
The Hong Kong-based firm Hutchison Whampoa has
opened a container port in Freeport. The
Bahamian Parliament approved legislation in 1993
that extended most Freeport tax and duty
exemptions through 2054.
Business Environment
The Bahamas offers attractive features to the
potential investor: a stable democratic
environment, relief from personal and corporate
income taxes, timely repatriation of corporate
profits, proximity to the United States with
extensive air and telecommunications links, and
a good pool of skilled professional workers. The
Government of The Bahamas welcomes foreign
investment in tourism and banking and has
declared an interest in agricultural and
industrial investments to generate local
employment, particularly in white-collar or
skilled jobs. Despite its interest in foreign
investment to diversify the economy, the
Bahamian Government responds to local concerns
about foreign competition and tends to protect
Bahamian business and labor interests. As a
result of domestic resistance to foreign
investment and high labor costs, growth can
stagnate in sectors which the government wishes
to diversify.
The country's infrastructure is best
developed in the principal cities of Nassau and
Freeport, where there are relatively good paved
roads and international airports. Electricity is
generally reliable, although many businesses
have their own backup generators. In Nassau,
there are two daily newspapers, three weeklies,
and several international newspapers available
for sale. There also are six radio stations.
Both Nassau and Freeport have a television
station. Cable TV and satellite also are
available locally and provide most American
programs with some Canadian and European
channels.
Areas of Opportunity
The best U.S. export opportunities remain in the
traditional areas of foodstuffs and manufactured
goods: vehicles and automobile parts; hotel,
restaurant, and medical supplies; and computers
and electronics. Bahamian tastes in consumer
products roughly parallel those in the United
States. Merchants in southern Florida have found
it profitable to advertise in Bahamian
publications. Most imports are subject to high
but nondiscriminatory tariffs.
FOREIGN RELATIONS
The Bahamas has strong bilateral relationships
with the United States and the United Kingdom,
represented by an ambassador in Washington and
High Commissioner in London. The Bahamas also
associates closely with other nations of the
Caribbean Community (CARICOM). The Bahamas has
an ambassador to Haiti and works closely with
the United States and CARICOM on political and
migration issues related to Haiti. The Bahamas
has diplomatic relations with Cuba, hosting a
Cuban Ambassador and planning a Bahamian
Consulate in Cuba. A repatriation agreement was
signed with Cuba in 1996, and there are
commercial and cultural contacts between the two
countries. The Bahamas also enjoys a
strengthening relationship with China. The
Commonwealth of The Bahamas became a member of
the United Nations in 1973 and the Organization
of American States in 1982.
The Bahamas holds membership in a number of
international organizations: the UN and some
specialized and related agencies, including Food
and Agriculture Organization (FAO),
International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO),
and the International Labor Organization (ILO);
International Monetary Fund (IMF); International
Telecommunication Union (ITU); World Bank; World
Meteorological Organization (WMO); World Health
Organization (WHO); OAS and related agencies,
including Inter-American Development Bank (IDB),
Caribbean Development Bank (CDB), and
Pan-American Health Organization (PAHO); the
Caribbean Community (CARICOM), excluding its
Common Market; the International Criminal Police
Organization (INTERPOL); Universal Postal Union
(UPU); International Maritime Organization
(IMO); World Intellectual Property Organization
(WIPO); and obtained observer status in the
World Trade Organization (WTO) in 2001.
U.S.-BAHAMIAN RELATIONS
The United States historically has had close
economic and commercial relations with The
Bahamas. The countries share ethnic and cultural
ties, especially in education, and The Bahamas
is home to approximately 30,000 American
residents. In addition, there are about 110
U.S.-related businesses in The Bahamas and, in
2004, 87% of the 5 million tourists visiting the
country were American.
As a neighbor, The Bahamas and its political
stability are especially important to the United
States. The U.S. and the Bahamian Government
have worked together on reducing crime and
reforming the judiciary. With the closest island
only 45 miles from the coast of Florida, The
Bahamas often is used as a gateway for drugs and
illegal aliens bound for the United States. The
United States and The Bahamas cooperate closely
to handle these threats. U.S. assistance and
resources have been essential to Bahamian
efforts to mitigate the persistent flow of
illegal narcotics and migrants through the
archipelago. The United States and The Bahamas
also actively cooperate on law enforcement,
civil aviation, marine research, meteorology,
and agricultural issues. The U.S. Navy operates
an underwater research facility on Andros
Island.
The Department of Homeland Security’s Bureau
of Customs and Border Protection maintains
“preclearance” facilities at the airports in
Nassau and Freeport. Travelers to the U.S. are
interviewed and inspected before departure,
allowing faster connection times in the U.S.
Principal U.S. Officials
Ambassador--John
D. Rood
Deputy Chief of Mission--Brent Hardt
Management Officer--Kay Crawford
Consul--Abdelnour Zaiback
Political-Economic Section Chief--Michael Taylor
Public Affairs Officer--Michael Taylor
The
U.S. Embassy is located at 42 Queen Street,
Nassau (tel. 242-322-1181; telex 20-138); the
local postal address is P.O. Box N-8197, Nassau,
The Bahamas.
Other Contact Information
U.S. Department of Commerce
International Trade Administration
Office of Latin America and the Caribbean
14th and Constitution, NW
Washington, DC 20230
Tel: 202-482-0704; 800-USA-TRADE
Fax: 202-482-0464
Caribbean/Latin American Action
1818 N Street, NW, Suite 310
Washington, DC 20036
Tel: 202-466-7464
Fax: 202-822-0075