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Region:
Central America
and the Caribbean
Capital:
Road Town
Population:
22,187 (July
2004 est)
Surface
Area:
153 sq km
Currency:
US dollar (USD)
GDP
per capita:
Purchasing Power
Parity - $16,000
(2002 est.)
Background:
First settled
by the Dutch
in 1648, the
islands were
annexed in 1672
by the English.
The economy is
closely tied
to the larger
and more populous
US Virgin Islands
to the west;
the US dollar
is the legal
currency.
Economy
– Overview:
The economy,
one of the most
stable and prosperous
in the Caribbean,
is highly dependent
on tourism, generating
an estimated
45% of the national
income. An estimated
350,000 tourists,
mainly from the
US, visited the
islands in 1998.
Tourism suffered
in 2002 because
of the lackluster
US economy. In
the mid-1980s,
the government
began offering
offshore registration
to companies
wishing to incorporate
in the islands,
and incorporation
fees now generate
substantial revenues.
Roughly 400,000
companies were
on the offshore
registry by yearend
2000. The adoption
of a comprehensive
insurance law
in late 1994,
which provides
a blanket of
confidentiality
with regulated
statutory gateways
for investigation
of criminal offenses,
is expected to
make the British
Virgin Islands
even more attractive
to international
business. Livestock
raising is the
most important
agricultural
activity; poor
soils limit the
islands' ability
to meet domestic
food requirements.
Because of traditionally
close links with
the US Virgin
Islands, the
British Virgin
Islands has used
the dollar as
its currency
since 1959.
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