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why
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Austria
Introduction //
Resources //
Population
// Economy
// Government |
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I. Introduction
Austria (German Österreich), republic in
central Europe, bounded on the north by the Czech Republic; on
the northeast by Slovakia; on the east by Hungary; on the
south by Slovenia, Italy, and Switzerland; and on the west by
Liechtenstein, Switzerland, and Germany. Austria is about 580
km (about 360 mi) long and has an area of 83,858 sq km (32,378
sq mi). Vienna (Wien) is the country's capital and largest
city.
II.
Land and Resources
Austria is predominantly a
mountainous country, with an average elevation of about 910 m
(about 3,000 ft). Most of the land falls within the eastern
division of the Alps. In general the major mountain ranges of
Austria run in an east-west direction and are separated from
one another by rather broad valleys. The northernmost line of
ranges includes the North Tirol (Tyrol) Alps and the Salzburg
Alps. Among the central ranges is the Hohe Tauern, which
culminates in the Grossglockner, the highest elevation (3,797
m/12,457 ft) in the country; the Pasterze Glacier, one of
Europe's largest, descends from the Grossglockner peak. The
southernmost ranges include the Ötztal Alps, the Zillertaler
Alps, the Carnic Alps, and the Karawanken Mountains. Besides
these east-west ranges, several series of mountain spurs
extend in a north-south direction. The mountain barriers of
Austria are broken in many places by passes, including the
Brenner Pass and the Semmering Pass.
The principal areas of Austria that are not within the Alps
are the northern and eastern border sections. The northern
section consists of rolling upland, and the eastern border
section comprises part of the Danube basin, including Vienna.
The principal river is the Danube, which enters Austria at
Passau on the German border; it continues its southeastern
course, past Linz and Vienna, to Bratislava on the Slovakian
border. Austrian tributaries of the Danube include the Inn
(forming part of Austria's German border), Traun, Enns, and
Ybbs rivers. In the south, important rivers are the Mur and
the Mürz. In addition to the rivers, the hydrographic system
of the country includes numerous lakes, notably Bodensee,
forming the western border with Liechtenstein and Switzerland,
and Neusiedler Lake in Burgenland, near Hungary. The lake is
the country's lowest elevation point (115 m/377 ft).
III.
Population
The Austrian people are
German-speaking, but the country has a varied ethnic mixture—a
legacy from the time of the multinational Habsburg Austria.
About 99 percent of the population is ethnic Austrian.
Minority groups include Croats and Hungarians (in Burgenland),
Slovenes (in Kärnten [Carinthia]), Czechs (in Vienna), as well
as small numbers of Italians, Serbs, and Romanians. An influx
of refugees in the years following World War II (1939-1945)
increased their numbers, and new groups, such as the Turks,
were added.
IV. Economy
The Austrian economy is based on
a balance of private and public enterprise. All the basic
industries were nationalized in 1946; these included all oil
production and refining; the largest commercial banks; and the
principal companies in river and air transportation, railroad
equipment, electric machinery and appliances, mining, iron,
steel, and chemical manufacturing, and natural-gas and
electric power production. However, government control was
reduced through privatization efforts in the late 1980s and
early 1990s, allowing for the sale of shares in many
nationalized companies to private investors. Over the years,
Austria maintained close ties with the countries of Eastern
Europe. Since the collapse of Communism in those countries in
the late 1980s and early 1990s, more than 1,000 Western
companies have chosen Austria as their base for new Eastern
European operations.
In 1997 the estimated annual national budget included revenues
of $76.8 billion and expenditures of $83.4 billion. Gross
domestic product (GDP) was $211.9 billion in 1998.
V. Government
Austria is a democratic, federal
republic governed according to the constitution of 1920, as
amended in 1929 and subsequently modified. Like the
constitutions of many other Western democracies, the
constitution of Austria provides for a distinct division of
power among the executive, the legislative, and the judicial
branches of government. Laws having their origin in 1862 and
1867 guarantee basic human rights and liberties; the rights of
minorities are also guaranteed by the constitution.
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Salzburg

Beethoven

Ski resorts
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