OFFICIAL NAME:
United
Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
Geography
Area: 243,000 sq. km. (93,000 sq. mi.); slightly smaller
than Oregon.
Cities: Capital--London (metropolitan pop. about 7.2
million). Other cities--Birmingham, Glasgow, Leeds,
Sheffield, Liverpool, Bradford, Manchester, Edinburgh,
Bristol, Belfast.
Terrain: 30% arable, 50% meadow and pasture, 12% waste or
urban, 7% forested, 1% inland water.
Land use: 25% arable, 46% meadows and pastures, 10% forests
and woodland, 19% other.
Climate: Generally mild and temperate; weather is subject to
frequent changes but to few extremes of temperature.
People
Nationality: Noun--Briton(s). Adjective--British.
Population (2004 est.): 60.27 million.
Annual population growth rate (2004 est.): 0.29%.
Major ethnic groups: British, Irish, West Indian, South
Asian.
Major religions: Church of England (Anglican), Roman
Catholic, Church of Scotland (Presbyterian), Muslim.
Major languages: English, Welsh, Irish Gaelic, Scottish
Gaelic.
Education: Years compulsory--12. Attendance--nearly
100%. Literacy--99%.
Health: Infant mortality rate (2004
est.)--5.22/1,000. Life expectancy (2004 est.)--males
75.84 yrs.; females 80.83 yrs.; total 78.27 years
Work force (2003, 29.8 million): Services--80.4%;
industry--18.7%; agriculture--0.9%.
Government
Type: Constitutional monarchy.
Constitution: Unwritten; partly statutes, partly common law
and practice.
Branches: Executive--monarch (head of state), prime
minister (head of government), cabinet. Legislative--bicameral
Parliament: House of Commons, House of Lords; Scottish
Parliament, Welsh Assembly, and Northern Ireland Assembly.
Judicial--magistrates' courts, county courts, high
courts, appellate courts, House of Lords.
Subdivisions: Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland
(municipalities, counties, and parliamentary
constituencies).
Political parties: Great Britain--Conservative, Labour,
Liberal Democrats; also, in Scotland--Scottish National
Party. Wales--Plaid Cymru (Party of Wales). Northern
Ireland--Ulster Unionist Party, Social Democratic and Labour
Party, Democratic Unionist Party, Sinn Fein, Alliance Party,
and other smaller parties.
Suffrage: British subjects and citizens of other
Commonwealth countries and the Irish Republic resident in
the U.K., at 18.
Economy
GDP (at current market prices, 2003 est.): $1.664 trillion.
Annual growth rate (2003 est.): 2.1%.
Per capita GDP (2003 est.): $27,700.
Natural resources: Coal, oil, natural gas, tin, limestone,
iron ore, salt, clay, chalk, gypsum, lead, silica.
Agriculture (1.1% of GDP): Products--cereals,
oilseed, potatoes, vegetables, cattle, sheep, poultry, fish.
Industry: Types--steel, heavy engineering and metal
manufacturing, textiles, motor vehicles and aircraft,
construction (5.2% of GDP), electronics, chemicals.
Trade (2003 est.): Exports of goods and services--$304.5
billion: manufactured goods, fuels, chemicals; food,
beverages, tobacco. Major markets--U.S., European
Union. Imports of goods and services--$363.6 billion:
manufactured goods, machinery, fuels, foodstuffs. Major
suppliers--U.S., European Union, Japan.
PEOPLE
The United Kingdom's population in 2004 surpassed 60
million--the third-largest in the European Union and the
21st-largest in the world. Its overall population density is
one of the highest in the world. Almost one-third of the
population lives in England's prosperous and fertile
southeast and is predominantly urban and suburban--with
about 7.2 million in the capital of London, which remains
the largest city in Europe. The United Kingdom's high
literacy rate (99%) is attributable to universal public
education introduced for the primary level in 1870 and
secondary level in 1900. Education is mandatory from ages 5
through 16. About one-fifth of British students go on to
post-secondary education. The Church of England and the
Church of Scotland are the official churches in their
respective parts of the country, but most religions found in
the world are represented in the United Kingdom.
A group of islands close to
continental Europe, the British Isles have been subject to
many invasions and migrations, especially from Scandinavia
and the continent, including Roman occupation for several
centuries. Contemporary Britons are descended mainly from
the varied ethnic stocks that settled there before the 11th
century. The pre-Celtic, Celtic, Roman, Anglo-Saxon, and
Norse influences were blended in Britain under the Normans,
Scandinavian Vikings who had lived in Northern France.
Although Celtic languages persist in Wales, Scotland, and
Northern Ireland, the predominant language is English, which
is primarily a blend of Anglo-Saxon and Norman French.
HISTORY
The Roman invasion of Britain in 55 BC and most of Britain's
subsequent incorporation into the Roman Empire stimulated
development and brought more active contacts with the rest
of Europe. As Rome's strength declined, the country again
was exposed to invasion--including the pivotal incursions of
the Angles, Saxons, and Jutes in the fifth and sixth
centuries AD--up to the Norman conquest in 1066. Norman rule
effectively ensured Britain's safety from further
intrusions; certain institutions, which remain
characteristic of Britain, could develop. Among these are a
political, administrative, cultural, and economic center in
London; a separate but established church; a system of
common law; distinctive and distinguished university
education; and representative government.
Union
Both Wales and Scotland were independent kingdoms that
resisted English rule. The English conquest of Wales
succeeded in 1282 under Edward I, and the Statute of
Rhuddlan established English rule 2 years later. To appease
the Welsh, Edward's son (later Edward II), who had been born
in Wales, was made Prince of Wales in 1301. The tradition of
bestowing this title on the eldest son of the British
Monarch continues today. An act of 1536 completed the
political and administrative union of England and Wales.
While maintaining separate
parliaments, England and Scotland were ruled under one crown
beginning in 1603, when James VI of Scotland succeeded his
cousin Elizabeth I as James I of England. In the ensuing 100
years, strong religious and political differences divided
the kingdoms. Finally, in 1707, England and Scotland were
unified as Great Britain, sharing a single Parliament at
Westminster.
Ireland's invasion by the
Anglo-Normans in 1170 led to centuries of strife. Successive
English kings sought to conquer Ireland. In the early 17th
century, large-scale settlement of the north from Scotland
and England began. After its defeat, Ireland was subjected,
with varying degrees of success, to control and regulation
by Britain.
The legislative union of Great
Britain and Ireland was completed on January 1, 1801, under
the name of the United Kingdom. However, armed struggle for
independence continued sporadically into the 20th century.
The Anglo-Irish Treaty of 1921 established the Irish Free
State, which subsequently left the Commonwealth and became a
republic after World War II. Six northern, predominantly
Protestant, Irish counties have remained part of the United
Kingdom.
British Expansion and Empire
Begun initially to support William the Conqueror's (c.
1029-1087) holdings in France, Britain's policy of active
involvement in continental European affairs endured for
several hundred years. By the end of the 14th century,
foreign trade, originally based on wool exports to Europe,
had emerged as a cornerstone of national policy.
The foundations of sea power were
gradually laid to protect English trade and open up new
routes. Defeat of the Spanish Armada in 1588 firmly
established England as a major sea power. Thereafter, its
interests outside Europe grew steadily. Attracted by the
spice trade, English mercantile interests spread first to
the Far East. In search of an alternate route to the Spice
Islands, John Cabot reached the North American continent in
1498. Sir Walter Raleigh organized the first, short-lived
colony in Virginia in 1584, and permanent English settlement
began in 1607 at Jamestown, Virginia. During the next two
centuries, Britain extended its influence abroad and
consolidated its political development at home.
Great Britain's industrial
revolution greatly strengthened its ability to oppose
Napoleonic France. By the end of the Napoleonic Wars in
1815, the United Kingdom was the foremost European power,
and its navy ruled the seas. Peace in Europe allowed the
British to focus their interests on more remote parts of the
world, and, during this period, the British Empire reached
its zenith. British colonial expansion reached its height
largely during the reign of Queen Victoria (1837-1901).
Queen Victoria's reign witnessed the spread of British
technology, commerce, language, and government throughout
the British Empire, which, at its greatest extent,
encompassed roughly one-fifth to one-quarter of the world's
area and population. British colonies contributed to the
United Kingdom's extraordinary economic growth and
strengthened its voice in world affairs. Even as the United
Kingdom extended its imperial reach overseas, it continued
to develop and broaden its democratic institutions at home.
20th Century
By the time of Queen Victoria's death in 1901, other
nations, including the United States and Germany, had
developed their own industries; the United Kingdom's
comparative economic advantage had lessened, and the
ambitions of its rivals had grown. The losses and
destruction of World War I, the depression of the 1930s, and
decades of relatively slow growth eroded the United
Kingdom's preeminent international position of the previous
century.
Britain's control over its empire
loosened during the interwar period. Ireland, with the
exception of six northern counties, gained independence from
the United Kingdom in 1921. Nationalism became stronger in
other parts of the empire, particularly in India and Egypt.
In 1926, the United Kingdom,
completing a process begun a century earlier, granted
Australia, Canada, and New Zealand complete autonomy within
the empire. They became charter members of the British
Commonwealth of Nations (now known as the Commonwealth), an
informal but closely-knit association that succeeded the
empire. Beginning with the independence of India and
Pakistan in 1947, the remainder of the British Empire was
almost completely dismantled. Today, most of Britain's
former colonies belong to the Commonwealth, almost all of
them as independent members. There are, however, 13 former
British colonies--including Bermuda, Gibraltar, the Falkland
Islands, and others--which have elected to continue their
political links with London and are known as United Kingdom
Overseas Territories.
Although often marked by economic
and political nationalism, the Commonwealth offers the
United Kingdom a voice in matters concerning many developing
countries. In addition, the Commonwealth helps preserve many
institutions deriving from British experience and models,
such as parliamentary democracy, in those countries.
GOVERNMENT
The United Kingdom does not have a written constitution. The
equivalent body of law is based on statute, common law, and
"traditional rights." Changes may come about formally
through new acts of Parliament, informally through the
acceptance of new practices and usage, or by judicial
precedents. Although Parliament has the theoretical power to
make or repeal any law, in actual practice the weight of 700
years of tradition restrains arbitrary actions.
Executive power rests nominally
with the monarch but actually is exercised by a committee of
ministers (cabinet) traditionally selected from among the
members of the House of Commons and, to a lesser extent, the
House of Lords. The prime minister is normally the leader of
the largest party in the Commons, and the government is
dependent on its support.
Parliament represents the entire
country and can legislate for the whole or for any
constituent part or combination of parts. The maximum
parliamentary term is 5 years, but the prime minister may
ask the monarch to dissolve Parliament and call a general
election at any time. The focus of legislative power is the
646-member House of Commons, which has sole jurisdiction
over finance. The House of Lords, although shorn of most of
its powers, can still review, amend, or delay temporarily
any bills except those relating to the budget. The House of
Lords has more time than the House of Commons to pursue one
of its more important functions--debating public issues. In
1999, the government removed the automatic right of
hereditary peers to hold seats in the House of Lords. The
current house consists of appointed life peers who hold
their seats for life and 92 hereditary peers who will hold
their seats only until final reforms have been agreed upon
and implemented. The judiciary is independent of the
legislative and executive branches but cannot review the
constitutionality of legislation.
The separate identities of each of
the United Kingdom's constituent parts are also reflected in
their respective governmental structures. Up until the
recent devolution of power to Scotland and Wales, a cabinet
minister (the Secretary of State for Wales) handled Welsh
affairs at the national level with the advice of a broadly
representative council for Wales. Scotland maintains, as it
did before union with England, different systems of law
(Roman-French), education, local government, judiciary, and
national church (the Church of Scotland instead of the
Church of England). In addition, separate departments
grouped under a Secretary of State for Scotland, who also is
a cabinet member, handled most domestic matters. In late
1997, however, following approval of referenda by Scottish
and Welsh voters (though only narrowly in Wales), the
British Government introduced legislation to establish a
Scottish Parliament and a Welsh Assembly. The first
elections for the two bodies were held May 6, 1999. The
Welsh Assembly opened on May 26, and the Scottish Parliament
opened on July 1, 1999. The devolved legislatures have
largely taken over most of the functions previously
performed by the Scottish and Welsh offices.
Northern Ireland had its own
Parliament and prime minister from 1921 to 1973, when the
British Government imposed direct rule in order to deal with
the deteriorating political and security situation. From
1973, the Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, based in
London, was responsible for the region, including efforts to
resolve the issues that lay behind the "the troubles."
By the mid-1990s, gestures toward
peace encouraged by successive British governments and by
President Clinton began to open the door for restored local
government in Northern Ireland. An Irish Republican Army
(IRA) cease-fire and nearly 2 years of multiparty
negotiations, led by former U.S. Senator George Mitchell,
resulted in the Good Friday Agreement of April 10, 1998,
which was subsequently approved by majorities in both
Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland. Key elements
of the agreement include devolved government, a commitment
of the parties to work toward "total disarmament of all
paramilitary organizations," police reform, and enhanced
mechanisms to guarantee human rights and equal opportunity.
The Good Friday Agreement also called for formal cooperation
between the Northern Ireland institutions and the Government
of the Republic of Ireland, and it established the
British-Irish Council, which includes representatives of the
British and Irish Governments as well as the devolved
Governments of Northern Ireland, Scotland, and Wales.
Devolved government was reestablished in Northern Ireland in
December 1999.
The Good Friday Agreement provides
for a 108-member elected Assembly, overseen by a 12-minister
Executive Committee (cabinet) in which unionists and
nationalists share leadership responsibility. Northern
Ireland elects 18 representatives to the Westminster
Parliament in London. However, the five Sinn Fein Members of
Parliament (MPs), who won seats in the last election, have
refused to claim their seats.
Progress has been made on each of
the key elements of the Good Friday Agreement. Most notably,
a new police force has been instituted; the IRA has
undertaken two acts of decommissioning of its weapons, and
some measures to normalize the security situation in
Northern Ireland have been taken. Disagreements over the
implementation of elements of the agreement and allegations
about the IRA's continued engagement in paramilitary
activity, however, continue to trouble the peace process. In
October 2002, Northern Ireland's devolved institutions were
suspended amid allegations of IRA intelligence gathering at
Stormont, the seat of Northern Ireland's government.
Assembly elections scheduled for May 2003 were postponed.
Elections were held in November 2003, but the Assembly
remains suspended. The British Government is working closely
with the Irish Government and Northern Ireland political
parties to create the conditions that would allow the
restoration of devolved government to take place.
The United States remains firmly
committed to the peace process in Northern Ireland and to
the Good Friday Agreement, which it views as the best means
to ensure lasting peace. The United States has condemned all
acts of terrorism and violence, perpetrated by any group.
The United States also is committed
to Northern Ireland's economic development and to date has
given or pledged contributions of more than $300 million to
the International Fund for Ireland. The fund provides grants
and loans to businesses to improve the economy, redress
inequalities of employment opportunity, and improve
cross-border business and community ties.
Principal Government Officials
Head of State--Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II
Prime Minister (Head of Government)--The Rt. Hon. Tony
Blair, MP
Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs--The
Rt. Hon. Margaret Beckett, MP
Ambassador to the U.S.--Sir David Manning
Ambassador to the UN--Sir Emyr Jones Parry, KCMG
The United Kingdom maintains an
embassy
in the United States at 3100 Massachusetts Ave. NW,
Washington, DC 20008 (tel. 202-588-6500; fax 202-588-7870).
POLITICAL CONDITIONS
Tony Blair became the first Labour Prime Minister ever to
win a third consecutive term when he was re-elected on May
5, 2005. Labour has a 67-seat majority in the House of
Commons. The Conservative (Tory) Party and Liberal-Democrats
(LibDems) form the major opposition parties. The main
British parties support a strong transatlantic link but have
become increasingly absorbed by European issues as Britain's
economic and political ties to the continent grow in the
post-Cold War world. Prime Minister Blair has promised that
the United Kingdom will play a leading role in Europe even
as it maintains its strong bilateral relationship with the
United States. Britain's relationship with Europe, in
particular its potential participation in the single
European currency, the euro, is a subject of considerable
political discussion in the United Kingdom. Chancellor of
the Exchequer Gordon Brown has stipulated that a referendum
on adopting the euro will occur only after five economic
tests are met.
ECONOMY
The United Kingdom has the fourth-largest economy in the
world, is the second-largest economy in the European Union,
and is a major international trading power. A highly
developed, diversified, market-based economy with extensive
social welfare services provides most residents with a high
standard of living. London ranks with New York as a leading
international financial center.
Since 1979, the British Government
has privatized most state-owned companies, including British
Steel, British Airways, British Telecom, British Coal,
British Aerospace, and British Gas, although in some cases
the government retains a "golden share" in these companies.
The Labour government has continued the privatization policy
of its predecessor, including by encouraging "public-private
partnerships" (partial privatization) in such areas as the
National Air Traffic Control System.
The United Kingdom is the European
Union’s only significant energy exporter. It is also one of
the world’s largest energy consumers, and most analysts
predict a shift in U.K. status from net exporter to net
importer of energy by 2020, possibly sooner. Oil production
in the U.K. is leveling off. While North Sea natural gas
production continues to rise, gains may be offset by
ever-increasing consumption. North Sea oil and gas
exploration activities are shifting to smaller fields and to
increments of larger, developed fields, presenting
opportunities for smaller, independent energy operators to
become active in North Sea production.
DEFENSE AND FOREIGN RELATIONS
The United Kingdom is a founding member of the North
Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) and is one of NATO's
major European maritime, air, and land powers; it ranks
third among NATO countries in total defense expenditure. The
United Kingdom has been a member of the European Community
(now European Union) since 1973. In the United Nations, the
United Kingdom is a permanent member of the Security
Council. The U.K. held the Presidency of the G-8 during
2005; it held the EU Presidency from July to December 2005.
The British Armed Forces are
charged with protecting the United Kingdom and its overseas
territories, promoting Britain's wider security interests,
and supporting international peacekeeping efforts. The
42,000-member Royal Navy is in charge of the United
Kingdom's independent strategic nuclear arm, which consists
of four Trident missile submarines. The Royal Marines
provide commando units for amphibious assault and for
specialist reinforcement forces in and beyond the NATO area.
The British Army--with a reported strength of 110,000 in
2001, including 7,600 women--and the Royal Air Force--with a
strength of 54,000--along with the Royal Navy and Royal
Marines, are active and regular participants in NATO and
other coalition operations.
The United Kingdom stood shoulder
to shoulder with the United States following the September
11, 2001 terrorist attacks in the U.S., and its military
forces participated in the war in Afghanistan. The U.K. was
the United States' main coalition partner in Operation Iraqi
Freedom and continues to have more than 8,000 troops
deployed in Iraq to help stabilize and rebuild the country.
Under UN Security Council Resolution 1483, the U.K. also
shared with the United States responsibility for civil
administration in Iraq and was an active participant in the
Coalition Provisional Authority before the handover of Iraqi
sovereignty on June 28, 2004. Britain's participation in the
Iraq war and its aftermath remains a domestically
controversial issue.