Difference between revisions of "El Salvador" - New World Encyclopedia

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{{claimed}}{{Contracted}}
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{{Ebcompleted}}{{2Copyedited}}{{Approved}}{{Submitted}}{{Images OK}}{{Paid}}{{Copyedited}}
{{Infobox Country or territory
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{{Infobox Country
|native_name              = ''República de El Salvador''
+
| conventional_long_name  = Republic of El Salvador
|conventional_long_name  = Republic of El Salvador
+
| native_name              = {{lang|es|República de El Salvador}}
|common_name              = El Salvador
+
| common_name              = Collateral City
|image_flag              = Flag of El Salvador.svg
+
| image_flag              = Flag of El Salvador.svg
|image_coat              = El Salvador COA.svg
+
| image_coat              = El Salvador COA.svg
|image_map                = LocationElSalvador.svg
+
| national_motto          = ''"Dios, Unión, Libertad"''{{Spaces|2}}<small>{{es icon}}<br />"God, Unity, Freedom"</small>
|national_motto          = ''"Dios, Unión, Libertad"''{{spaces|2}}<small>(Spanish)<br/>"God, Union, Liberty"</small>
+
| national_anthem          = [[National Anthem of El Salvador|Himno Nacional de El Salvador]]<br/>National anthem of El Salvador
|national_anthem          = ''Himno Nacional de El Salvador''
+
| image_map                = LocationElSalvador.svg
|official_languages      = Spanish
+
| official_languages      = [[Spanish language|Castilian (Castellano)]]
|capital                  = San Salvador
+
| ethnic_groups            =
|latd=13 |latm=40 |latNS=N |longd=89 |longm=10 |longEW=W
+
| demonym                  = Salvadoran
|largest_city            = capital
+
| capital                  = [[San Salvador]]
|government_type          = Republic
+
| latd                     = 13
|leader_title1            = President
+
| latm                     = 40
|leader_name1            = Antonio Saca
+
| latNS                   = N
|sovereignty_type        = Independence
+
| longd                   = 89
|established_event1      = from Spain
+
| longm                   = 10
|established_date1        = September 15 1821
+
| longEW                   = W
|established_event2      = from the UPCA
+
| largest_city            = [[San Salvador]]
|established_date2       = 1842
+
| government_type          = [[Federalism|Federal]] [[Presidential system|presidential]] [[constitutional republic]]
|area_rank                = 152nd
+
| leader_title1            = [[President of El Salvador|President]]
|area_magnitude          = 1 E8
+
| leader_name1            = [[Nayib Bukele]]
|area                    = 21,040
+
| leader_title2            = [[Vice President of El Salvador|Vice President]]
|areami²                  = 8,124 <!--Do not remove per WP:MOSNUM—>
+
| leader_name2            = [[Félix Ulloa]]
|percent_water            = 1.4
+
| legislature              = [[Legislative Assembly of El Salvador|Legislative Assembly]]
|population_estimate     = 6,948,073
+
| sovereignty_type        = [[Independence]]
|population_estimate_year = July 2007
+
| established_event1      = from [[Spain]]
|population_estimate_rank = 97th
+
| established_date1        = September 15, 1821
|population_census        = 5,118,599
+
| established_event2       = Recognized by [[Spain]]
|population_census_year  = 1992
+
| established_date2        = June 24, 1865
|population_density      = 318.7
+
| established_event3       = from the [[Greater Republic of Central America]]
|population_densitymi²    = 823.6 <!--Do not remove per WP:MOSNUM—>
+
| established_date3       = November 13, 1898
|population_density_rank = 32nd
+
| area_rank                = 153rd
|population_infantmortality_rate = 24.4/1000
+
| area_magnitude          = 1 E8
|population_birth_rate    = 26.6/1000
+
| area_km2                = 21,040
|GDP_PPP                  = $36.246 billion
+
| area_sq_mi              = 8,124 <!--Do not remove per [[WP:MOSNUM]]—>
|GDP_PPP_rank             = 93rd
+
| percent_water            = 1.4
|GDP_PPP_year             = 2005
+
| population_estimate   = 6,572,243<ref>[https://www.cia.gov/the-world-factbook/countries/el-salvador/ El Salvador] CIA ''World Factbook'' Retrieved May 26, 2023.</ref>
|GDP_PPP_per_capita       = 5,515
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| population_estimate_year = 2023
|GDP_PPP_per_capita_rank = 101th
+
| population_estimate_rank = 109th
|Gini                    = 52.4
+
| population_density_km2 = 324.4
|Gini_year                = 2002
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| population_density_sq_mi = 840 <!--Do not remove per [[WP:MOSNUM]]—>
|Gini_category            = <font color="#e0584e">high</font>
+
| population_density_rank = 26th
|HDI                      = 0.722
+
| GDP_PPP                = {{increase}}$74.05 billion <ref name="imf2">[https://www.imf.org/en/Publications/WEO/weo-database/2022/October World Economic Outlook Database, October 2022] ''International Monetary Fund''. Retrieved May 26, 2023.</ref>
|HDI_rank                = 101th
+
| GDP_PPP_rank           = 107th
|HDI_year                = 2006
+
| GDP_PPP_year           = 2023
|HDI_category            = <font color="#ffcc00">medium</font>
+
| GDP_PPP_per_capita     = {{increase}}$11,647 <ref name=imf2/>
|currency                = Salvadoran colón <small>(1919&ndash;2001)</small><br/>United States dollar <small>(2001&ndash;present)</small>
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| GDP_PPP_per_capita_rank = 114th
|currency_code            =  
+
| GDP_nominal            = {{increase}}$33.75 billion<ref name=imf2/>
|country_code            =  
+
| GDP_nominal_rank      = 104th
|time_zone                =  
+
| GDP_nominal_year      = 2023
|utc_offset              = -6
+
| GDP_nominal_per_capita = {{increase}}$5,308<ref name=imf2/>
|time_zone_DST            =  
+
| GDP_nominal_per_capita_rank = 108th
|utc_offset_DST          =  
+
| Gini                  = 38.8 <ref name=WB1>[https://data.worldbank.org/indicator/SI.POV.GINI?locations=SV Gini index - El Salvador] ''World Bank''. Retrieved May 26, 2023.</ref><!--number only—>
|cctld                    = .sv
+
| Gini_year              = 2019
|calling_code            = 503<sup>1</sup>
+
| Gini_change            = decrease <!--increase/decrease/steady—>
|footnote1                = Telephone companies (market share): Tigo (45%), Claro (25%), Movistar (24%), Digicel (5.5%), Red (0.5%).
+
| Gini_ref              =
 +
| Gini_rank              =
 +
| currency                = [[United States dollar|U.S. dollar]]<sup>2</sup>
 +
| currency_code            = USD
 +
| country_code            = 5o3
 +
| time_zone                =  
 +
| utc_offset              = -6
 +
| time_zone_DST            =  
 +
| utc_offset_DST          =  
 +
| drives_on                = right
 +
| cctld                    = [[.sv]]
 +
| calling_code            = +503<sup>1</sup>
 +
| footnote1                = Telephone companies (market share): Tigo (45%), Claro (25%), Movistar (24%), Digicel (5.5%), Red (0.5%).
 +
| footnote2                = The [[United States dollar]] is the currency in use. Financial information can be expressed in U.S. Dollars and in [[Salvadoran colón]], but the colón is out of circulation.<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20070708094105/http://www.bcr.gob.sv/ingles/integracion/ley.html Monetary Integration] ''Banco Central de Reserva de El Salvador''. Retrieved May 26, 2023.</ref>
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| footnote3                = On the [[Coat of arms of El Salvador|Coat of Arms of El Salvador]], the country's name is written "Republica de El Salvador en la America Central," Meaning "Republic of El Salvador in the Central America"
 
}}
 
}}
'''El Salvador''' is a country in [[Central America]], bordering the North [[Pacific Ocean]] between [[Guatemala]] and [[Honduras]], with a population of approximately 6.9 million people. El Salvador is the most densely populated nation on the American mainland and is undergoing rapid [[industrialization]]. Its official name is the '''''Republic of El Salvador'''''. The country was named after the Spanish word for "The Saviour," in honor of Jesus Christ.
 
  
El Salvador was known as "Nequepio" to the Olmec and Quiche tribes that inhabited the region prior to the migration that came from neighboring tribes of northern Mesoamerica.
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'''El Salvador''', officially the '''Republic of El Salvador''', is a country in [[Central America]], bordering the [[Pacific Ocean]] between [[Guatemala]] and [[Honduras]]. With a population of over 6.9 million people, El Salvador is the most densely populated nation on the American mainland and is undergoing rapid [[industrialization]]. The country was named after the Spanish word for "The Savior," in honor of [[Jesus Christ]].
  
The Pipiles, who arrived from central Mexico, renamed the area "'''''Cuscatlán'''''," because of the lushness and fertileness of the land.  Cuscatlán translates as "Land of Precious Jewels" in the native indigenous tongue known as Pipil-Nawat (Nahuatl).
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El Salvador achieved independence from Spain in 1821 and from the Central American Federation in 1839. A 12-year [[civil war]], which cost about 75,000 lives, was brought to a close in 1992 when the government and leftist rebels signed a treaty that provided for military and political reforms.
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{{toc}}
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For many decades, [[coffee]] was the mainspring of the Salvadoran economy. The civil war and the fall of international coffee prices in the 1990s pressured the government to develop other export industries, such as [[textile]]s, and promote [[tourism]]. Among the attractions are [[Maya]]n ruins, numerous extinct and active [[volcano]]es, and the Monte Cristo [[cloud]] [[forest]].  
  
 
==Geography==
 
==Geography==
[[Image:Elsalvador relief map 1980.jpg|thumb|right|300px|Shaded relief map of El Salvador]]
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El Salvador is located in [[Central America]]. It has a total area of 8,123 square miles (21,040&nbsp;km²), making it almost the same size as the state of [[Massachusetts]]. El Salvador shares borders with [[Guatemala]] (126&nbsp;mi / 203&nbsp;km) and [[Honduras]] (212.5&nbsp;mi / 342&nbsp;km). It is the only Central American country that does not have a [[Caribbean]] coastline. The highest point in the country is Cerro El Pital at 8,957 feet (2,730 m).
[[Image:Sanvicentevolcanojiboavalley.jpg|thumb|200px|The scenic Jiboa Valley and San Vicente volcano.]]
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[[Image:Hakatana.jpg|thumb|left|Volcan de San Vicente]]
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El Salvador is the smallest country in continental America. Several small rivers flow through it into the [[Pacific Ocean]], including the Goascorán, Jiboa, Torola, Paz and the Río Grande de San Miguel. Only the largest river, the Lempa River, flowing from Honduras across El Salvador to the Pacific Ocean, is navigable for commercial traffic. [[Volcano|Volcanic]] [[crater]]s enclose lakes, the most important of which are Lake Ilopango and Lake Coatepeque. Lake Güija is El Salvador's largest natural lake. Several artificial lakes were created by the damming of the Lempa.
[[Image:elpital.jpg|thumb|200px|Survey marker at the summit of Cerro El Pital.]]
 
{{main|Geography of El Salvador}}
 
El Salvador is located in [[Central America]]. It has a total area of 8,123 square miles (21,040&nbsp;km²), making it almost the same size as the state of [[Massachusetts]]. El Salvador shares borders with [[Guatemala]] (126&nbsp;mi / 203&nbsp;km) and [[Honduras]] (212.5&nbsp;mi / 342&nbsp;km). It is the only Central American country that does not have a Caribbean coastline. The highest point in the country is Cerro El Pital at 8,957 feet (2,730 meters).
 
  
El Salvador is the smallest country in continental America. Due to its size it is affectionately called the "Tom Thumb of the Americas" ''("Pulgarcito de America")''. It has 123.6 square miles (320&nbsp;km²) of water within its borders. Several small rivers flow through El Salvador into the [[Pacific Ocean]], including the Goascorán, Jiboa, Torola, Paz and the Río Grande de San Miguel. Only the largest river, the Lempa River, flowing from Honduras across El Salvador to the ocean, is navigable for commercial traffic. Volcanic craters enclose lakes, the most important of which are Lake Ilopango (70&nbsp;km² / 27&nbsp;sq&nbsp;mi) and Lake Coatepeque (26&nbsp;km² / 10&nbsp;sq&nbsp;mi). Lake Güija is El Salvador's largest natural lake (44&nbsp;km² / 17&nbsp;sq&nbsp;mi). Several artificial lakes were created by the damming of the Lempa, the largest of which is Embalse Cerrón Grande (350&nbsp;km² / 135&nbsp;sq&nbsp;mi).
 
 
===Climate===
 
===Climate===
El Salvador has a tropical climate with pronounced wet and dry seasons. Temperatures vary primarily with elevation and show little seasonal change. The Pacific lowlands are uniformly hot; the central plateau and mountain areas are more moderate.
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[[Image:Elsalvador relief map 1980.jpg|thumb|right|400px|Shaded relief map of El Salvador]]
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El Salvador has a tropical [[climate]] with pronounced wet and dry seasons. [[Temperature]]s vary primarily with elevation and show little seasonal change. The Pacific lowlands are uniformly hot; the central plateau and mountain areas are more moderate and may even approach freezing.
 
   
 
   
The rainy season extends from May to October. Almost all the annual rainfall occurs during this time, and yearly totals, particularly on southern-facing mountain slopes, can be as high as 200 centimeters. Protected areas and the central plateau receive lesser, although still significant, amounts. Rainfall during this season generally comes from low pressure over the Pacific and usually falls in heavy afternoon thunderstorms. Although hurricanes occasionally form in the Pacific, they seldom affect El Salvador, with the notable exception of Hurricane Mitch in 1998.
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The rainy season extends from May to October. Almost all the annual [[rain]]fall occurs during this time, and yearly totals, particularly on southern-facing mountain slopes, can be as high as 200 centimeters. Protected areas and the central plateau receive lesser, although still significant, amounts. Rainfall during this season generally comes from low pressure over the Pacific and usually falls in heavy afternoon thunderstorms. Although [[hurricane]]s occasionally form in the Pacific, they seldom affect El Salvador, with the notable exception of Hurricane Mitch in 1998. El Salvador's location in Central America also makes it vulnerable to hurricanes coming off the Caribbean; however, this risk is much less than for other Central American countries.
  
 
From November through April, the northeast trade winds control weather patterns. During these months, air flowing from the Caribbean has had most of the precipitation wrung out of it while passing over the mountains in Honduras. By the time this air reaches El Salvador, it is dry, hot, and hazy.
 
From November through April, the northeast trade winds control weather patterns. During these months, air flowing from the Caribbean has had most of the precipitation wrung out of it while passing over the mountains in Honduras. By the time this air reaches El Salvador, it is dry, hot, and hazy.
  
Temperatures vary little with season; elevation is the primary determinant. The Pacific lowlands are the hottest and most humid region, with annual averages ranging from 25°C to 29°C. San Salvador is representative of the central plateau, with an annual average temperature of 23°C and absolute high and low readings of 38°C and 2°C, respectively. Mountain areas are the coolest, with annual averages from 12°C to 23°C and minimum temperatures sometimes approaching freezing.
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===Natural disasters===
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[[Image:ElSalvadorslide.jpg|thumb|right|300px|A landslide caused by one of the 2001 El Salvador earthquakes]]
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Located on the Pacific's [[earthquake]]-prone [[Ring of Fire]] and at latitudes plagued by [[hurricane]]s, El Salvador's history is a litany of catastrophe, including the Great Hurricane of 1780 that killed 22,000 in Central America and earthquakes in 1854 and 1917 that devastated El Salvador and destroyed most of the capital city. More recently, an October 1986 earthquake killed 1,400 and seriously damaged the nation's infrastructure; in 1998, Hurricane Mitch killed 10,000 in the region, although El Salvador—lacking a [[Caribbean]] coast—suffered less than [[Honduras]] and [[Nicaragua]]. Major earthquakes in January and February of 2001 took another 1,000 lives and left thousands more homeless and jobless. El Salvador's largest [[volcano]], Santa Ana (also known by its indigenous name [[Ilamatepec]]), erupted in October 2005, spewing tons of sulfuric gas, ash, and rock on surrounding communities and coffee plantations and killing two people and permanently displaced 5,000. Also in October 2005, Hurricane Stan unleashed heavy rains that caused flooding throughout El Salvador. In all, the flooding caused 67 deaths, and more than 50,000 people were evacuated during the crisis. Damages from the storm were estimated at $355.6 million.
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El Salvador's position on the [[Pacific Ocean]] also makes it subject to severe weather conditions, including heavy rainstorms and severe [[drought]]s, both of which may be made more extreme by the [[El Niño]] and [[La Niña]] effects. In the summer of 2001, a severe drought destroyed 80 percent of the country's crops, causing [[famine]] in the countryside. On October 4, 2005, severe rains resulted in dangerous flooding and landslides, which caused at minimum 50 deaths.
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===Flora and fauna===
 
===Flora and fauna===
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Where El Salvador, [[Guatemala]], and [[Honduras]] meet lies a nature reserve that protects the Monte Cristo cloud forest, a [[tropical forest]] at a high altitude that is usually enveloped in clouds. Towering [[oak]] and [[laurel]] trees create a canopy overhead, and the high humidity and rainfall creates a habitat for such [[plant]]s as [[orchid]]s, [[fern]]s, and [[moss]]es. [[Animal]]s found there include spider [[monkey]]s, [[porcupine]]s, [[anteater]]s, and [[opossum]]s. [[Toucan]]s, nightingales, [[hummingbird]]s, and [[woodpecker]]s are among the [[bird]]s.
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In the hot, coastal plains grow [[palm]] and [[fruit]] [[tree]]s. [[Reptile]]s such as [[crocodile]]s and [[turtle]]s, as well as [[fish]], live in the many rivers, lakes, and coastal waters. But much of El Salvador's trees were cut down to export the wood and clear land for farming.
  
 
==History ==  
 
==History ==  
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[[Image:Sanvicentevolcanojiboavalley.jpg|thumb|400px|The scenic Jiboa Valley and San Vicente volcano.]]
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[[Maya]]n ruins have been excavated at Tazumal and San Andre, providing evidence their culture was present in 5000 B.C.E. [[Aztec]] and [[Pipil]] peoples succeeded them.
  
In the early sixteenth century, the Spanish [[conquistador]]s ventured into [[Central America]] from [[Mexico]], then known as the Spanish colony of New Spain. Spanish efforts to extend their dominion to the area that would be known as El Salvador were firmly resisted by the Pipil and their remaining Mayan-speaking neighbors. Pedro de Alvarado, a lieutenant of [[Hernan Cortes]], led the first effort by Spanish forces in June 1524.  
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El Salvador was known as "Nequepio" to the tribes that inhabited the region prior to the migration from northern Mesoamerica. The [[Pipils]], who arrived from central [[Mexico]], renamed the area ''Cuscatlán,'' because of the lushness of the land. Cuscatlán translates as "Land of Precious Jewels."
  
Led by a war leader tradition calls Atlacatl, the indigenous people defeated the [[Spain|Spaniards]] and forced them to withdraw to [[Guatemala]]. Two subsequent expeditions were required—the first in 1525, followed by a smaller group in 1528—to bring the Pipil under Spanish control.
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In the early sixteenth century, [[Spain|Spanish]] [[conquistador]]s ventured into [[Central America]] from Mexico. Spain's efforts to extend its dominion to the area that would become El Salvador were firmly resisted by the Pipil and their remaining Mayan-speaking neighbors. Pedro de Alvarado, a lieutenant of [[Hernan Cortes]], led the first effort by Spanish forces in 1524.  
  
Toward the end of 1810, a combination of external and internal factors allowed Central American elites to attempt to gain independence from the Spanish crown. The internal factors were mainly the interest the elites had in controlling the territories they owned without involvement from Spanish authorities. The external factors were the success of the French and American revolutions in the eighteenth century and the weakening of the military power of the Spanish crown because of its wars against [[Napoleon Bonaparte|Napoleonic]] [[France]]. The independence movement was consolidated on November 5, 1811, when the Salvadorian priest, Jose Matías Delgado, sounded the bells of the Iglesia La Merced in San Salvador, making a call for insurrection. After many years of internal fights, the ''Acta de Independencia'' (Act of Independence) of Central America was signed in Guatemala on September 15, 1821.
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Led by a war–leader tradition calls ''Atlacatl,'' the indigenous people defeated the Spaniards and forced them to withdraw to [[Guatemala]]. Two subsequent expeditions were required—the first in 1525, followed by a smaller group in 1528—to bring the Pipil under Spanish control.
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===Independence===
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Toward the end of 1810, a combination of external and internal factors allowed Central American elites to attempt to gain independence from the Spanish crown. The internal factors were mainly the interest the elites had in controlling the territories they owned without involvement from Spanish authorities. The external factors were the success of the [[French Revolution|French]] and [[American Revolution|American revolution]]s in the eighteenth century and the weakening of the military power of the Spanish crown because of its wars against [[Napoleon Bonaparte|Napoleonic]] [[France]]. The independence movement was consolidated on November 5, 1811, when Salvadorian priest Jose Matías Delgado sounded the bells of the Iglesia La Merced in San Salvador, making a call for insurrection. After many years of internal fights, the ''Acta de Independencia'' (Act of Independence) of Central America was signed in Guatemala on September 15, 1821.
 
   
 
   
On September 16, 1821, [[Mexico]] gained independence as the First Mexican Empire under the rule of Emperor Agustin de Iturbide, El Salvador and the other [[Central American]] provinces declared their independence from Spain and became part of the Mexican Empire. In 1823, the United Provinces of Central America was formed by the five Central American states under General Manuel José Arce. When this federation was dissolved in 1838, El Salvador became an independent republic. El Salvador's early history as an independent state was marked by frequent revolutions.
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On September 16, 1821, Mexico gained independence as the First Mexican Empire. El Salvador and the other Central American provinces declared their independence from Spain and became part of the [[Mexican Empire]]. In 1823, the United Provinces of Central America was formed by the five Central American states. When this federation was dissolved in 1838, El Salvador became an independent republic.  
  
 
From 1872 to 1898, El Salvador was a prime mover in attempts to reestablish an isthmian federation. The governments of El Salvador, [[Honduras]], and [[Nicaragua]] formed the Greater Republic of Central America via the Pact of Amapala in 1895. Although Guatemala and [[Costa Rica]] considered joining the Greater Republic (which was rechristened the United States of Central America when its constitution went into effect in 1898), neither country joined. This union, which had planned to establish its capital city at Amapala on the Golfo de Fonseca, did not survive a seizure of power in El Salvador in 1898.  
 
From 1872 to 1898, El Salvador was a prime mover in attempts to reestablish an isthmian federation. The governments of El Salvador, [[Honduras]], and [[Nicaragua]] formed the Greater Republic of Central America via the Pact of Amapala in 1895. Although Guatemala and [[Costa Rica]] considered joining the Greater Republic (which was rechristened the United States of Central America when its constitution went into effect in 1898), neither country joined. This union, which had planned to establish its capital city at Amapala on the Golfo de Fonseca, did not survive a seizure of power in El Salvador in 1898.  
  
The enormous profits that [[coffee]] yielded as a mono culture export served as an impetus for the process whereby land became concentrated in the hands of an [[oligarchy]] of several hundred families. A succession of presidents from the ranks of the Salvadorian oligarchy, nominally both [[Conservatism|conservative]] and [[Liberalism|liberal]], throughout the last half of the nineteenth century generally agreed on the promotion of coffee as the predominant cash crop, on the development of infrastructure ([[railroad]]s and port facilities) primarily in support of the coffee trade, on the elimination of communal landholdings to facilitate further coffee production, on the passage of anti-vagrancy laws to ensure that displaced campesinos and other rural residents provided sufficient labor for the coffee ''fincas'' (plantations), and on the suppression of rural discontent.  In 1912, the national guard was created as a rural police force.  
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The enormous profits that [[coffee]] yielded as an export crop served as an impetus for land becoming concentrated in the hands of several hundred families. A succession of presidents from the ranks of the [[oligarchy]], nominally both [[Conservatism|conservative]] and [[Liberalism|liberal]], throughout the last half of the nineteenth century generally agreed on:
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** the promotion of [[coffee]] as the predominant cash crop,
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** the development of infrastructure, ([[railroad]]s and port facilities) primarily, in support of the coffee trade,
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** the elimination of communal landholdings to facilitate further coffee production,
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** the passage of anti-vagrancy laws to ensure that displaced campesinos and other rural residents provided sufficient labor for the coffee ''fincas'' (plantations), and
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** the suppression of rural discontent.
  
The coffee industry grew inexorably in El Salvador. As a result the elite provided the bulk of the government's financial support through [[International trade|import]] [[duty|duties]] on goods imported with the foreign [[currency|currencies]] that coffee sales earned. This support, coupled with the humbler and more mundane mechanisms of [[political corruption|corruption]], ensured the coffee growers of overwhelming influence within the [[government]].
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As the coffee industry grew, the bulk of the government's financial support came from [[duty|duties]] on goods imported with the foreign currencies that coffee sales earned. This support, coupled with [[corruption]], ensured the coffee growers of overwhelming influence within the government.  
  
El Salvador's early history as an independent state—as with others in Central America—was marked by frequent revolutions; not until the period 1900-30 was relative stability achieved. The economic elite, based on agriculture and some mining, ruled the country in conjunction with the military, and the power structure remained in the control of the "Fourteen Families" of wealthy landowners.  
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El Salvador's early history as an independent state—as with others in Central America—was marked by frequent revolutions; not until the period 1900-1930 was relative stability achieved. The economic elite, based on [[agriculture]] and some [[mining]], ruled the country in conjunction with the military, and the power structure remained in the control of the "Fourteen Families" of wealthy landowners.  
  
The economy, based on coffee-growing after the mid-19th century, as the world market for indigo withered away, prospered or suffered as the world coffee price fluctuated. From 1931—the year of the coup in which Gen. Maximiliano Hernández Martínez came to power until he was deposed in 1944 there was brutal suppression of rural resistance. The most notable event was the 1932 Salvadoran peasant uprising, commonly referred to as La Matanza (the massacre), headed by Farabundo Martí and the retaliation led by Martinez's government, in which approximately 30,000 indigenous people and political opponents were murdered, imprisoned or exiled. Until 1980, all but one Salvadoran temporary president was an army officer. Periodic presidential elections were seldom free or fair.
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The economy prospered or suffered as the world coffee price fluctuated. From 1931—the year of the coup in which Gen. Maximiliano Hernández Martínez came to power—until he was deposed in 1944, there was brutal suppression of rural resistance. The most notable event was the 1932 Salvadoran peasant uprising, commonly referred to as ''La Matanza'' (the massacre), headed by [[Farabundo Martí]] and the retaliation led by Martinez's government, in which approximately 30,000 indigenous people and political opponents were murdered, imprisoned, or exiled. Until 1980, all but one Salvadoran temporary president was an army officer. Periodic presidential elections were seldom free or fair.
 +
 
 +
===Football War===
 +
[[Image:elpital.jpg|thumb|400px|Survey marker at the summit of Cerro El Pital]]
 +
The origins of the Salvadoran civil war lie in the early 1970s. Salvadoran industry and economy had been devastated by the [[Football War]] with [[Honduras]] in 1969. The roots of this Football War were issues over land reform and immigration. Honduras is more than five times the size of neighboring El Salvador, even though in 1969, El Salvador had a population that was more than double that of Honduras. At the beginning of the twentieth century, Salvadorans had begun migrating into Honduras in large numbers in search of jobs, and by 1969, more than 350,000 Salvadorans were living in Honduras (20 percent of the Honduran peasant population). In 1969, Honduras enacted a new [[land reform]] law that took land away from Salvadoran immigrants and redistributed it to native-born Hondurans. Thousands of Salvadorans were displaced.
 +
 
 +
These existing tensions between the two countries were inflamed by rioting during the second North American qualifying round for the 1970 [[FIFA World Cup]]. On July 14, 1969, the Salvadoran army attacked Honduras. The [[Organization of American States]] negotiated a cease-fire, which took effect on July 20, and Salvadoran troops were withdrawn in early August.
 +
 
 +
Eleven years later the two nations signed a peace treaty that put their border dispute before the [[International Court of Justice]]. In 1992, the Court awarded most of the disputed territory to Honduras, and in 1998, Honduras and El Salvador signed a border demarcation treaty to implement the terms of the decree.
 +
 
 +
===Civil war===
 +
The Football War had a devastating effect on El Salvador's [[economy]]. Many Salvadorans had been forcibly exiled or had fled from war-torn Honduras. Most had to provide for themselves, with very little assistance, in a land already dealing with [[overpopulation]] and extreme [[poverty]]. Trade between Honduras and El Salvador had been disrupted and the border officially closed. The war led to a 22-year suspension of the [[Central American Common Market]], a regional integration project. The social situation worsened in El Salvador as the government proved unable to satisfy the economic needs of citizens deported from Honduras. The resulting social unrest was one of the causes of the [[civil war]] that followed.
 +
 
 +
The war was predominantly fought between the government and a coalition of four leftist [[guerrilla]] groups and one [[communism|communist]] group known as the Farabundo Martí National Liberation Front (FMLN) between  1980 and 1992. In the context of [[Cold War]] concerns about growing [[Soviet Union|Soviet]] involvement in the Western Hemisphere, the [[United States]] gave aid to El Salvador's government.
 +
 
 +
More than 75,000 people are estimated to have died in the conflict. By 1991, however, a new willingness to cooperate was emerging. A truce was declared in April and negotiations concluded in January 1992. The opposing sides signed peace accords that ended the war, brought the military under civilian control, and allowed the former [[Guerrilla war|guerrillas]] to form a legitimate political party and to participate in elections. A new constitution was enacted.
  
 
==Politics==
 
==Politics==
The political framework of El Salvador takes place in a presidential representative democratic republic, whereby the President of El Salvador (Elias Antonio Saca) is both head of state and head of government, and of a multiform multi-party system. Executive power is exercised by the government. Legislative power is vested in both the government and the Legislative Assembly. The Judiciary is independent of the executive and the legislature. A strongly [[Roman Catholic]] nation, El Salvador is one of three countries in the world where [[abortion]] is illegal with no exceptions, along with [[Chile]] and [[Nicaragua]].
+
The political framework of El Salvador takes place in a presidential representative democratic republic, whereby the president is both head of state and head of government. The president is elected by universal suffrage and serves for a five-year term by absolute majority vote. A second round runoff is required in the event that no candidate receives more than 50 percent of the first round vote. Executive power is exercised by the government.
 +
 
 +
Legislative power is vested in both the government and the Legislative Assembly. Members of the assembly, also elected by universal suffrage, serve for three-year terms. The next elections will be held in February and March 2009.  
 +
 
 +
A strongly [[Roman Catholic]] nation, El Salvador is one of three countries in the world where [[abortion]] is illegal with no exceptions, along with [[Chile]] and [[Nicaragua]].
 +
 
 +
The judiciary is independent of the executive and the legislature. Action on peace accord-driven constitutional reforms designed to improve the administration of justice was largely completed in 1996 with legislative approval of several amendments and the revision of the Criminal Procedure Code—with broad political consensus.
  
== Departments and municipalities ==
+
===Foreign relations===
El Salvador is divided into 14 departments, which, in turn, are subdivided into 267 municipalities. The departments are:
+
El Salvador is a member of the [[United Nations]] and several of its specialized agencies, the [[Organization of American States]] (OAS), the Central American Common Market (CACM), the Central American Parliament, and the Central American Integration System. It actively participates in the Central American Security Commission (CASC), which seeks to promote regional arms control. From 2002-2003, El Salvador was chair of the OAS anti-terrorism coordinating body, CICTE.
<table><td><ol>
 
<li>Ahuachapán
 
<li>Cabañas
 
<li>Chalatenango
 
<li>Cuscatlán
 
<li>La Libertad
 
<li>La Paz
 
<li>La Unión
 
</td></ol><td><ol start=8>
 
<li>Morazán
 
<li>San Miguel
 
<li>San Salvador
 
<li>San Vicente
 
<li>Santa Ana
 
<li>Sonsonate
 
<li>Usulután
 
</ol></td></table>
 
  
==Natural disasters==
+
El Salvador also is a member of the [[World Trade Organization]] and is pursuing regional [[free trade]] agreements. An active participant in the Summit of the Americas process, El Salvador chairs a working group on market access under the [[Free Trade Area of the Americas]] initiative. El Salvador has joined its six Central American neighbors in signing the Alliance for Sustainable Development, known as the Conjunta Centroamerica-USA or CONCAUSA to promote sustainable economic development in the region.
El Salvador lies along the Pacific ring of fire, and is thus subject to significant [[Tectonic plate|tectonic]] activity, including frequent [[earthquake]]s and [[Volcano|volcanic]] activity. Recent examples include the earthquake on January 13, 2001 that measured 7.6 on the Richter scale and caused a [[landslide]] that killed more than eight hundred people; and the earthquake only a month later on February 13, 2001, killing 255 people and damaging about 20 percent of the nation's housing. Luckily many families, were able to find safety from the landslides caused by the earthquake. El Salvador's most recent destructive volcanic eruption took place on October 1, 2005, when the Ilamatepec volcano spewed up a cloud of ash and rocks, which fell on nearby villages and caused two deaths (Óscar Armando Guerrero Ventura and José Rafael Guevara).  
 
[[Image:ElSalvadorslide.jpg|thumb|right|200px|A landslide caused by one of the 2001 El Salvador earthquakes]]
 
  
El Salvador's position on the [[Pacific Ocean]] also makes it subject to severe weather conditions, including heavy rainstorms and severe [[drought]]s, both of which may be made more extreme by the [[El Nino]] and [[La Nina]] effects. In the summer of 2001, a severe drought destroyed 80 percent of the country's crops, causing [[famine]] in the countryside. On October 4, 2005, severe rains resulted in dangerous flooding and [[landslides]], which caused at minimum fifty deaths. El Salvador's location in [[Central America]] also makes it vulnerable to [[hurricane]]s coming off the [[Caribbean]]; however, this risk is much less than for other Central American countries.
+
El Salvador enjoys normal diplomatic and trade relations with all of its neighboring countries including [[Honduras]], with which it previously had territorial disputes. While the two nations continue to disagree over the status of their maritime borders in the [[Gulf of Fonseca]], they have agreed to settle their land-border disputes with the [[International Court of Justice]] (ICJ). In September 1992, the Court awarded most of the territory in question to Honduras. In January 1998, Honduras and El Salvador signed a border demarcation treaty to implement the terms of the ICJ decree.
  
== Economy ==
+
U.S.-Salvadoran relations remain close and strong. El Salvador has been a member of the coalition of nations fighting against [[terrorism]] and also provided a battalion to the efforts to bring stability to [[Iraq]].
The Salvadoran economy has experienced mixed results from the recent government's commitment to [[free market]] initiatives and conservative fiscal management that include the [[privatization]] of the [[banking]] system, [[telecommunications]], public pensions, electrical distribution, and some [[electrical generation]], reduction of [[International trade|import]] [[Duty|duties]], elimination of [[price control]]s, and an improved enforcement of [[intellectual property rights]]. The GDP has been growing at a steady and moderate pace in an environment of [[macroeconomic]] stability since the signing of peace accords in 1992. A problem that the Salvadorian economy faces is the inequality in the distribution of income. In 1999, the richest fifth of the population received 45% of the country's income, while the poorest fifth received only 5.6%.
 
  
As of December 1999, net international reserves equaled US$1.8 billion or roughly five months of imports. Having this hard currency buffer to work with, the Salvadoran government undertook a monetary integration plan beginning January 1 2001 by which the U.S. dollar became legal tender alongside the Salvadoran colón and all formal accounting was done in U.S. dollars. This way, the government has formally limited its possibility of implementing open market monetary policies to influence short term variables in the economy.
+
=== Administrative divisions ===
 +
El Salvador is divided into 14 departments, which, in turn, are subdivided into 267 municipalities.
  
Since 2004, the colón stopped circulating and is now never used in the country for any type of transaction. In general, there was discontent with the shift to the U.S. dollar, primarily due to wage stagnation vis-a-vis basic commodity pricing in the marketplace. Additionally there are contentions that, according to [[Gresham's Law]], a reversion to the colón would be disastrous to the economy. The change to the dollar also precipitated a trend toward lower interest rates in El Salvador, helping many to secure much needed credit for house or car purchases.
+
==Human rights==
 +
During the 12-year civil war, [[human rights]] violations by both the government security forces and left-wing guerrillas were rampant. The accords ending the war established a Truth Commission under [[United Nations|UN]] auspices to investigate the most serious cases. The commission reported its findings in 1993 and recommended that those identified as human rights violators be removed from all government and military posts. Thereafter, the Legislative Assembly granted [[amnesty]] for political crimes committed during the war. Among those freed as a result were the Salvadoran Armed Forces (ESAF) officers convicted in the November 1989 [[Jesuit]] murders and the FMLN ex-combatants held for the 1991 murders of two U.S. servicemen. The peace accords also established the Ad Hoc Commission to evaluate the human rights record of the ESAF officer corps.  
  
A challenge in El Salvador has been developing new growth sectors for a more diversified economy. As many other former colonies, for many years El Salvador was considered a mono-export economy (an economy that depended heavily on one type of export). During colonial times, the Spanish decided that El Salvador would produce and export [[indigo]], but after the invention of synthetic dyes in the 19th century, Salvadoran authorities and the newly created modern state turned to [[coffee]] as the main export. Since the cultivation of coffee required the highest lands in the country, many of these lands were expropriated from [[indigenous reserves]] and given or sold cheaply to those that could cultivate coffee. The government provided little or no compensation to the indigenous peoples. On occasion, this compensation implied merely the right to work for seasons in the newly created coffee farms and to be allowed to grow their own food. Such actions provided the basis of conflicts that would shape the political landscape of El Salvador for years to come.
+
In accordance with the peace agreements, the constitution was amended to prohibit the military from playing an internal security role except under extraordinary circumstances. Demobilization of Salvadoran military forces generally proceeded on schedule throughout the process. The Treasury Police, National Guard, and National Police were abolished, and military intelligence functions were transferred to civilian control. By 1993—nine months ahead of schedule—the military had cut personnel from a war-time high of 63,000 to the level of 32,000 required by the peace accords. By 1999, ESAF strength stood at less than 15,000, consisting of personnel in the army, navy, and air force. A purge of military officers accused of human rights abuses and corruption was completed in 1993 in compliance with the Ad Hoc Commission's recommendations. The military's new doctrine, professionalism, and complete withdrawal from political and economic affairs leave it the most respected institution in El Salvador.  
  
For many decades, coffee was one of the only sources of foreign currency in the Salvadoran economy. The Salvadoran Civil War in the 1980s and the fall of international coffee prices in the 1990s pressured the Salvadoran government to diversify the economy. The government has followed policies that intend to develop other export industries, such as textiles and sea products. Tourism is another industry Salvadoran authorities see as a possibility. But rampant crime rates, lack of infrastructure, and inadequate social capital have prevented this resource from being properly exploited and is still underdeveloped.  
+
More than 35,000 eligible beneficiaries from among the former guerrillas and soldiers who fought the war received land under the peace accord-mandated land transfer program, which ended in January 1997. The majority of them also have received agricultural credits. The international community, the Salvadoran government, the former rebels, and the various financial institutions involved in the process continue to work closely together to deal with follow-on issues resulting from the program.  
  
There are 15 [[free trade zone]]s in El Salvador. The largest beneficiary has been the maquila industry, which provides 88,700 jobs directly, and consists primarily of supplying labor for the cutting and assembling of clothes for [[export]] to the [[United States]].
+
Today, El Salvador is a constitutional, multiparty democracy with an estimated population of 6.9 million. In 2004 voters elected [[Elias Antonio Saca]] of the Nationalist Republican Alliance (ARENA) as president for a five-year term in generally free and fair elections. Nationwide municipal and Legislative Assembly elections were also free and fair. Civilian authorities generally maintain effective control of the security forces.
  
El Salvador signed the [[Central American Free Trade Agreement]] (CAFTA) &mdash; negotiated by the five countries of [[Central America]] and the [[Dominican Republic]] &mdash; with the United States in 2004. To take advantage of CAFTA, the Salvadoran government is challenged to conduct policies that guarantee better conditions for entrepreneurs and workers to transfer from declining to growing sectors in the economy. El Salvador has signed free trade agreements with [[Mexico]], [[Chile]], the Dominican Republic, and [[Panama]], and increased its [[exports]] to those countries. El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, and Nicaragua also are negotiating a free trade agreement with [[Canada]], and negotiations started in 2006 for a free trade agreement with [[Colombia]].
+
Although the government generally respects the rights of its citizens, protection of human rights is undermined by widespread violent [[crime]], including gang-related violence, impunity, and corruption. The most significant human rights problems included harsh, violent, and overcrowded [[prison]] conditions; lengthy pretrial detention; inefficiency and corruption in the judicial system; violence and discrimination against women; [[child abuse|abuses]] against children, [[child labor]], and forced [[child prostitution]]; [[human trafficking|trafficking]] in persons; discrimination against persons with disabilities; discrimination against indigenous persons; discrimination against persons based on sexual orientation; and lack of enforcement of labor rights.
  
Fiscal policy has been the biggest challenge for the Salvadoran government. The 1992 peace accords committed the government to heavy expenditures for transition programs and [[social work|social services]]. The Stability Adjustment Programs (PAE, for the initials in Spanish) initiated by President Cristiani's administration committed the government to the privatization of banks, the pension system, and the electric and telephone companies. The total privatization of the pension system has implied a serious burden for the public finance system, because the newly created private Pension Association Funds did not absorb coverage of retired pensioners covered under the old system. The government lost the revenues from contributors and absorbed completely the costs of coverage of retired pensioners. This has been the main source of fiscal imbalance. ARENA governments have financed this deficit with the emission of bonds, something the leftist FMLN has opposed. Debates surrounding the emission of bonds have stalled the approval of the national budget for many months on several occasions. The emission of bonds and the approval of government loans need a qualified majority (3/4 of the votes) in the National Legislature. If the deficit is not financed through a loan it is enough with a simple majority to approve the budget (50% of the votes plus 1).  
+
== Economy ==
 +
The Salvadoran economy has experienced mixed results from the recent government's commitment to [[free trade|free market]] initiatives and conservative fiscal management that include the [[privatization]] of the [[banking]] system, telecommunications, public pensions, electrical distribution, and some electrical generation, reduction of [[International trade|import]] [[Duty|duties]], elimination of price controls, and an improved enforcement of [[intellectual property]] rights.  
  
Many specialists claim that it is impossible to advance significant development programs with such little public sector aid. (The tax burden in the United States is around 25% of the GDP and in developed countries of the EU it can reach around 50%.) The government has focused on improving the collection of its current [[revenues]] with a focus on indirect taxes. Leftist politicians criticize such a structure since indirect taxes (like the value-added tax) affect everyone alike, whereas direct taxes can be weighed according to levels of income.  A 10% [[value-added tax]] (VAT), implemented in September 1992, was raised to 13% in July 1995. The VAT is the biggest source of revenue, accounting for about 52.3% of total [[tax revenues]] in 2004.
+
By December 1999, net international reserves equaled US$1.8 billion or roughly five months of imports. Having this hard currency buffer to work with, the Salvadoran government undertook a monetary integration plan beginning January 1, 2001, by which the U.S. dollar became legal tender alongside the Salvadoran ''colón,'' and all formal accounting was done in U.S. dollars. This way, the government formally limited its possibility of implementing open market monetary policies to influence short-term variables in the economy.
  
[[Inflation]] has been steady and among the lowest in the region. Since 1997 inflation has averaged 3%, with recent years increasing to nearly 5%. From 2000 to 2006 total exports have grown 19% from $2.94 billion to $3.51 billion. During this same period total imports have risen 54% from $4.95 billion to $7.63 billion. This has resulted in a 102% increase in the trade deficit from $2.01 billion to $4.12 billion.
+
Since 2004, the ''colón'' has stopped circulating and is now never used in the country for any type of transaction. In general, there was discontent with the shift to the U.S. dollar, primarily due to wage stagnation ''vis-a-vis'' basic commodity pricing in the marketplace. Additionally there are contentions that reverting to the ''colón'' would be disastrous to the economy. The change to the dollar also precipitated a trend toward lower interest rates in El Salvador, helping many to secure much-needed credit for house or car purchases.
  
Remittances from Salvadorans living and working in the United States, sent to family in El Salvador, are a major source of foreign income and offset the substantial [[trade deficit]] of $4.12 billion. Remittances have increased steadily in the last decade and reached an all-time high of $2.547 billion in 2005 (an increase of 21% over the previous year), approximately 16.2% of gross domestic product(GDP).  
+
A challenge in El Salvador has been developing new growth sectors for a more diversified economy. As with many other former colonies, for many years El Salvador was considered a mono-export economy (one that depended heavily on one type of export). During colonial times, the [[Spain|Spanish]] decided that El Salvador would produce and export [[indigo]], but after the invention of synthetic dyes in the nineteenth century, Salvadoran authorities turned to [[coffee]] as the main export. Since the cultivation of coffee required the higher-elevation lands in the country, many of these lands were expropriated and given or sold cheaply to those who could cultivate coffee. The government provided little or no compensation to the indigenous peoples. On occasion, this compensation implied merely the right to work for seasons in the newly created coffee farms and to be allowed to grow their own food. Such actions provided the basis of conflicts that would shape the political landscape of El Salvador for years to come.
  
Remittances have had positive and negative effects on El Salvador. In 2005 the number of people living in extreme poverty in El Salvador was 16%, according to a United Nations Development Program report, without remittances the number of Salvadorans living in extreme poverty would rise to 37%. While Salvadoran education levels have gone up, wage expectations have risen faster than either skills or productivity. For example, some Salvadorans are no longer willing to take jobs that pay them less than what they receive monthly from family members abroad. This has led to an influx of Hondurans and Nicaraguans who are willing to work for the prevailing wage. Also, the local propensity for consumption over investment has increased. Money from [[remittances]] have also increased prices for certain commodities such as real estate. Many Salvadorans abroad earning much higher wages can afford higher prices for houses in El Salvador than local Salvadorans and thus push up the prices that all Salvadorans must pay.
+
===Diversification===
 +
For many decades, coffee was one of the only sources of foreign currency in the Salvadoran economy. The Salvadoran civil war in the 1980s and the fall of international coffee prices in the 1990s pressured the Salvadoran government to diversify the economy. The government has followed policies that intend to develop other export industries, such as [[textile]]s and sea products. [[Tourism]] is another industry seen as a possibility. But rampant [[crime]] rates, lack of infrastructure, and inadequate social capital have prevented this resource from being properly exploited, and it is still underdeveloped.  
  
As of September 2006, net [[international reserve system|international reserves]] stood at $2.02 billion.
+
There are 15 free trade zones in El Salvador. The largest beneficiary has been the ''maquila'' industry, which consists primarily of supplying labor for the cutting and assembling of clothes for [[export]] to the [[United States]].
=== Tourism ===
+
 
The only airport serving international flights in the country is: Aeropuerto Internacional El Salvador (International Airport of El Salvador, airport code: SAL).  This airport is located in Comalapa: about 45 minutes southeast of the capital.. The airport is often also referred to as: Cuscatlan Airport or by its original name: Aeropuerto Internacional Comalapa.
+
El Salvador signed the [[Central American Free Trade Agreement]] (CAFTA) &mdash; negotiated by the five countries of [[Central America]] and the [[Dominican Republic]] &mdash; with the United States in 2004. To take advantage of CAFTA, the Salvadoran government is challenged to conduct policies that guarantee better conditions for entrepreneurs and workers to transfer from declining to growing sectors in the economy. El Salvador has also signed free trade agreements with [[Mexico]], [[Chile]], the Dominican Republic, and [[Panama]], and it has increased its exports to those countries. El Salvador, [[Guatemala]], [[Honduras]], and [[Nicaragua]] also are negotiating a free trade agreement with [[Canada]], and negotiations started in 2006 for a free trade agreement with [[Colombia]].
  
Between 1996 and 2006, 7.3 million visitors [[Central Americans]], and [[Europeans]] helped generate a record $1.7 billion. Most of the [[North America]]n and [[European]] tourists are seeking out El Salvador's beaches and nightlife. More and more  continue to be drawn by El Salvador's turbulent past. The latest tourist attractions in the former war-torn El Salvador are gun fragments, pictures, combat plans and mountain hideouts. Since 1992, residents in economically depressed areas are trying to profit from these remains.
+
Fiscal policy has been the biggest challenge for the Salvadoran government. The 1992 peace accords committed the government to heavy expenditures for transition programs and social services. The Stability Adjustment Programs (PAE, for the initials in Spanish) initiated by President Cristiani's administration committed the government to the privatization of banks, the pension system, and the electric and telephone companies. The total [[privatization]] of the pension system has resulted in a serious burden for the public finance system, because the newly created private Pension Association Funds did not absorb coverage of retired pensioners covered under the old system. The government lost the revenues from contributors and absorbed completely the costs of coverage of retired pensioners. This has been the main source of fiscal imbalance.
  
The mountain town of Perquin was considered the "guerrilla capital." Today it is home to the "Museum of the Revolution," featuring cannons, uniforms, pieces of [[Soviet]] weaponry and other weapons of war once used by the FMLN's (Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front) headquarters.
+
Remittances from Salvadorans living and working in the United States are a major source of foreign income and offset the substantial trade deficit. Such remittances have had positive and negative effects on El Salvador. In 2005 the number of people living in extreme poverty in El Salvador was 16 percent, according to a [[United Nations]] Development Program report. Without remittances, the number of Salvadorans living in extreme poverty would rise to 37 percent.
  
El Salvador continues to grow as an attraction. 40% of El Salvador visitors want to enjoy the sun and the countries beautiful beaches, 38% of El Salvador visitors enjoy the colonial structures and the countries history, 22% enjoy the nature and El Salvador mountains. According to El Salvador news paper El Diario De Hoy the top 10 main attractions are the beaches.
+
While Salvadoran education levels have gone up, wage expectations have risen faster than either skills or productivity. For example, some Salvadorans are no longer willing to take jobs that pay them less than what they receive monthly from family members abroad. This has led to an influx of Hondurans and Nicaraguans who are willing to work for the prevailing wage. Also, the local propensity for [[consumption]] over [[investment]] has increased. Money from remittances have also increased prices for certain commodities such as real estate. Many Salvadorans abroad earning much higher wages can afford higher prices for houses in El Salvador than local Salvadorans and thus push up the prices that all Salvadorans must pay.
 +
 
 +
=== Tourism ===
 +
Most of the [[North America]]n and [[European]] tourists are seeking out El Salvador's [[beach]]es and nightlife. More and more continue to be drawn by El Salvador's turbulent past. The latest tourist attractions in the former war-torn El Salvador are gun fragments, pictures, combat plans, and mountain hideouts. Since 1992, residents in economically depressed areas are trying to profit from these remains.
  
 
== Demographics ==
 
== Demographics ==
{{main|Demographics of El Salvador}}
+
Around 90 percent of the population are ''mestizo'' (of mixed Amerindian and Spanish origin). El Salvador is one percent indigenous, mostly [[Pipil]] and [[Lenca]]. Very few [[Amerindian]]s have retained their native customs, traditions, or [[language]]s, especially in the wake communist-led labor strikes followed by the 1932 government crackdown in which the Salvadoran military murdered up to 40,000 peasants.
El Salvador's population numbers around 7 million people. 90% of Salvadorans are [[mestizo]] (mixed [[Amerindian]] and [[Spanish people|Spanish origin]]), while 9% are [[White (people)|White]]. The white population is mostly of Spanish descent, but there are also some of [[French people|French]], [[Germans|German]], [[Swiss people|Swiss]], and [[Italian people|Italian]] descent. El Salvador is 1% indigenous, mostly [[Pipil]] and [[Lenca people|Lenca]]. Very few Amerindians have retained their native customs, traditions, or languages, especially in the wake of the deliberate [[La Matanza|1932 massacres]] in which the [[Military of El Salvador|Salvadoran military]] murdered up to 40,000 peasants.
 
  
El Salvador is the only Central American country that has no visible [[African]] population because of its relative inaccessibility to the Atlantic slave trade.{{Fact|date=June 2007}} However, Salvadorans with African [[heritage]] are present, most notably in San Salvador, the capital.<ref name="B"/> In addition, General [[Maximiliano Hernandez Martinez]] instituted race laws in 1930 that prohibited [[blacks]] from entering the country, this changed during the 1980s and the law was removed.<ref name="B">{{cite book |author=Montgomery, Tommie Sue |title=Revolution in El Salvador: from civil strife to civil peace |publisher=Westview Press |location=Boulder, Colo |year=1995 |pages= |isbn=0-8133-0071-1 |oclc= |doi=}}</ref>
+
El Salvador is the only Central American country that has no visible [[Africa]]n population due to its relative inaccessibility to the Atlantic [[slave trade]]. In addition, General [[Maximiliano Hernandez Martinez]] instituted [[race laws]] in 1930 that prohibited [[blacks]] from entering the country; this changed during the 1980s and the law was removed. However, Salvadorans with African heritage are present, most notably in San Salvador, the capital.
  
Among the few immigrant groups that reached El Salvador, [[Palestinian Christians]] stand out. Though few in number, their descendants have attained great economic and political power in the country, as evidenced by President [[Antonio Saca]] and the flourishing commercial, industrial, and construction firms owned by them.
+
Among the few immigrant groups that reached El Salvador, [[Palestine|Palestinian]] [[Christian]]s stand out. Though few in number, their descendants have attained great economic and political power in the country, as evidenced by President [[Antonio Saca]] and the flourishing commercial, industrial, and construction firms owned by them.
  
Spanish is the official language and therefore spoken by virtually all inhabitants (some of the indigenous still speak their native tongues). [[English language|English]] is also spoken by many throughout the republic since many have studied or lived in English speaking countries (mainly the U.S., but also Canada and Australia).
+
[[Spanish language|Spanish]] is the official [[language]] and therefore spoken by virtually all inhabitants (some of the indigenous still speak their native tongue Nahuatl). [[English language|English]] is also spoken by many, since a number have studied or lived in English-speaking countries.
  
Although nominally [[Roman Catholic]], [[Protestantism]] is growing rapidly and is already more than 20% of the population.<ref>[http://www.state.gov/g/drl/rls/irf/2005/51638.htm International Religious Freedom Report 2005]</ref> Anglican, Presbyterian, Methodist, Seventh-Day Adventist churches are all growing rapidly as are Pentecostals, Mormons and Muslims/ Musulmanes <ref> [http://www.islam.org.sv/] </ref>
+
Although nominally [[Roman Catholic]], [[Protestantism]] is growing rapidly and already accounts for more than 20 percent of the population. [[Anglican Church|Anglican]], [[Presbyterianism|Presbyterian]], [[Methodist]], and [[Seventh-Day Adventists|Seventh-Day Adventist]] churches are all growing rapidly, as are [[Pentecostalism|Pentecostals]], [[Mormon]]s, and [[Muslim]]s.
  
The capital city of [[San Salvador]] has about 2.1 million people; an estimated 42% of El Salvador's population live in rural areas. Urbanization expanded at a phenomenal rate in El Salvador since the 1960s, driving millions to the cities and creating growth problems for cities around the country.
+
In 2004, there were approximately 3.2 million Salvadorans living outside El Salvador, with more than one million of whom were [[illegal alien|undocumented immigrant]]s in the [[United States]]. By 2007 the Salvadorian ambassador to the United States estimated that one quarter of the nation's population live in the United States.<ref>N.C. Aizenman, [https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/01/08/AR2007010801709.html "The Face of El Salvador's Charm Offensive: Consul General Uses Personal Touch to Woo Expatriate Community"] ''The Washington Post'' (January 9, 2007). Retrieved May 26, 2023.</ref> Expatriates send an estimated $2.8 billion in remittances to their families back in El Salvador. Many Salvadoran-Americans are legal immigrants. The United States has traditionally been the destination of choice for Salvadorans looking for greater economic opportunity. Through the [[Sanctuary Movement]] of the 1980s, religious activists brought in tens of thousands of refugees from El Salvador to the United States, many suffering persecution from their government for activities related to [[liberation theology]]. Salvadorans also live in nearby [[Guatemala]] and [[Nicaragua]]. Other countries with notable Salvadoran communities include [[Canada]], [[Mexico]], the [[Cayman Islands]], [[Sweden]], [[Italy]], and [[Australia]]. The majority of the expatriates emigrated during the civil war of the 1980s due to adverse economic and social conditions.
  
According to the most recent [[United Nations]] survey, life expectancy for men was 68 years and 74 years for women. [[Education in El Salvador]] is free through ninth grade. The national [[literacy]] rate is 84.1%.
 
 
As of 2004, there were approximately 3.2 million Salvadorans living outside El Salvador, some of whom are [[undocumented immigrant]]s in the [[United States]]. Many other Salvadoran-Americans are legal immigrants, many becoming citizens or residents through the Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986. The USA has traditionally been the destination of choice for Salvadorans looking for greater economic opportunity. Salvadorans also live in nearby  [[Guatemala]], and [[Nicaragua]]. Other countries with notable Salvadoran communities include [[Canada]], [[Mexico]], the [[Cayman Islands]], [[Sweden]], [[Italy]] and [[Australia]].{{Fact|date=April 2007}} The majority of the expatriates emigrated during the civil war of the 1980s and due to adverse economic and social conditions.
 
 
== Culture ==
 
== Culture ==
Spanish is the official language of El Salvador, but many locals speak English. The [[Roman Catholic]] religion plays an important role in the Salvadorian culture. Important foreign personalities in El Salvador were the [[Jesuit]] priests and professors Ignacio Ellacuria, Ignacio Martín-Baró and Segundo Montes. Painting, ceramics and textile goods are the main manual artistic expressions. Writers Francisco Gavidia (1863–1955), Salarrué (Salvador Salazar Arrué) (1899-1975), Claudia Lars, Alfredo Espino, Pedro Geoffroy, Manlio Argueta, José Roberto Cea and poet Roque Dalton are among the most important writers to stem from El Salvador. Notable twentieth century personages include the late filmmaker Baltasar Polio, artist Fernando Llort, and caricaturist Toño Salazar. Amongst the more renowned representatives of the graphic arts are the painters Noe Canjura, Carlos Cañas, Julia Díaz, Camilo Minero, Ricardo Carbonell, Roberto Huezo, and many others.
+
[[File:SalvadorDelMundo.jpg|thumb|300px|The iconic statue of Christ on the globe sphere of planet earth is part of the Monumento al Divino Salvador del Mundo ('Monument to the Divine Saviour of the World') on Plaza El Salvador del Mundo ('The Saviour of the World Plaza'), a landmark located in the country's capital, San Salvador]]
 +
Spanish is the official language of El Salvador, but many locals speak English. The [[Roman Catholic]] [[religion]] plays an important role in the Salvadorian culture. Important foreign personalities in El Salvador were the [[Jesuit]] priests and professors Ignacio Ellacuria, Ignacio Martín-Baró, and Segundo Montes.
  
 +
Painting, ceramics, and textile goods are the main manual artistic expressions. Writers Francisco Gavidia (1863–1955), Salarrué (Salvador Salazar Arrué) (1899-1975), Claudia Lars, Alfredo Espino, Pedro Geoffroy, Manlio Argueta, José Roberto Cea, and poet Roque Dalton are among the most important writers to stem from El Salvador. Notable twentieth-century personages include the late filmmaker Baltasar Polio, artist Fernando Llort, and caricaturist Toño Salazar. Amongst the more renowned representatives of the graphic arts are the painters Noe Canjura, Carlos Cañas, Julia Díaz, Camilo Minero, Ricardo Carbonell, Roberto Huezo, and many others.
  
 
=== Cuisine ===
 
=== Cuisine ===
El Salvador's most notable dish is the pupusa. Pupusas are a thick hand-made corn tortilla (made using masa de maíz or masa de arroz, a maize or rice flour dough used in Latin American cuisine) stuffed with one or more of the following: cheese (queso) (usually a soft Salvadoran cheese called Quesillo con loroco), fried pork rind (chicharrón), chicken (pollo), refried beans (frijoles refritos), or/and queso con loroco (loroco is a vine flower bud from Central America). New stuffings such as shrimp or ayote are used by adventurous restaurants.  
+
[[File:Plain pupusas revueltas.jpg|thumb|400px|''Pupusas'', the national and most famous dish of El Salvador]]
 +
El Salvador's most notable dish is the ''pupusa,'' a thick hand-made [[corn]] tortilla (made using ''masa de maíz'' or ''masa de arroz,'' a maize or rice flour dough used in [[Latin America]]n cuisine) stuffed with one or more of the following: [[cheese]] ''(queso)'' (usually a soft Salvadoran cheese called ''Quesillo con loroco''), fried pork rind ''(chicharrón),'' [[chicken]] ''(pollo),'' refried [[beans]] ''(frijoles refritos),'' and/or ''queso con loroco'' (loroco is an edible  vine flower bud from [[Central America]]). New stuffings such as [[shrimp]] or ''ayote'' (squash) are used by adventurous restaurants.  
  
Pupusas are from El Salvador, but immigrants have brought the dish to areas of residence such as Northern California (the San Francisco Bay Area), Southern California, Virginia, Washington D.C., and other locations, where there are now many pupuserias (a place where pupusas are sold). Pupusas are usually served with curtido (a type of either spicy coleslaw or pickled/vinegared cabbage), and a tomato based sauce. They are eaten with the fingers.  
+
Immigrants have brought ''pupusas'' to areas such as [[California]], [[Virginia]], [[Washington, D.C.]], and other locations. ''Pupusas'' are usually served with ''curtido'' (a type of either spicy coleslaw or pickled/vinegared cabbage), and a tomato-based sauce. They are eaten with the fingers.  
  
Pupusas come from the Pipil-Nahuatl word ''pupushahua'', which means tortilla filled with cheese, beans, chicharrón (pork), ayote, cream, carrots, etc. They were first eaten by the natives there almost three millennia ago.
+
''Pupusas'' come from the Pipil-Nahuatl word ''pupushahua,'' which means tortilla filled with cheese, beans, ''chicharrón'' (pork cracklin's), ayote, cream, carrots, etc. They were first eaten by the natives almost three millennia ago.
  
Two other typical Salvadoran dishes are Yuca Frita and Pan con Chumpe (Pavo). The Yuca Frita is deep fried and served with curtido (Salvadoran pickled cabbage salad) with chicharrones (pork cracklings) or pepesquitas (fried baby sardines) on top. The Pan con Chumpe (Pavo= Turkey) is a marinated turkey roasted and handpulled submarine sandwich (hoagie) that is sold at local stands and is very tasty because of the many Pipil spices used to roast the turkey.
+
Two other typical Salvadoran dishes are ''Yuca Frita'' and ''Pan con Chumpe (Pavo).'' The Yuca Frita is deep fried and served with ''curtido'' (Salvadoran pickled cabbage salad) with ''chicharrones'' or ''pepesquitas'' (fried baby sardines) on top. The ''Pan con Chumpe'' (''Pavo'' = turkey) is a marinated turkey, roasted and handpulled, submarine sandwich (hoagie) that is sold at local stands and is very tasty because of the many ''Pipil'' spices (annatto, clove, allspice, pepper) used to roast the turkey.
  
 
===Music===
 
===Music===
El Salvador is a Central American country whose culture is a mixture of Mayan, Pipil and Spanish. Its music includes religious songs (mostly Roman Catholic) used to celebrate Christmas and other holidays, especially feast days of the saints. Satirical and rural lyrical themes are common. Popular styles in modern El Salvador include salsa, cumbia, hip hop, rap and reggaeton.
+
El Salvador is a Central American country whose culture is a mixture of [[Maya]]n, Pipil, and Spanish. Its music includes religious songs (mostly [[Roman Catholic]]) used to celebrate [[Christmas]] and other holidays, especially feast days of the saints. Satirical and rural lyrical themes are common. Popular styles in modern El Salvador include [[salsa]], ''cumbia,'' hip hop, rap, and [[reggae]].
 
 
Musicians include Aniceto MOlina, Bobby Rivas, Jhosse Lora, Marito Rivera y su Grupo Bravo, Los Hermanos Flores, Pastor Lopez and some of the more recent groups are Mecate, Heavy Clan, Pescozada, Cosa Nostra, Son 3/4, Adhesivo, La Chanchona de Arcadio, Anastasio y los del Monte, Las Nenas de Caña, Alto Mando, and DJ Emsy, Mr. Pelon 503, Alvaro Torres, Los Vikings de Usulutan, Los Apaches de Usulutan.
 
 
 
==Notes and references==
 
<div class="references-small"><references/></div>
 
  
== Bibliography ==
+
==Notes==
*Bonner, Raymond. ''Weakness and Deceit: U.S. Policy and El Salvador.'' New York: Times Books, 1984.
+
<references/>
*Danner, Mark. ''The Massacre at El Mozote: A Parable of the Cold War.'' New York: Vintage Books, 1994.
 
*Vilas, Carlos.  ''Between Earthquakes and Volcanoes: Market, State, and the Revolutions in Central America.''  New York: Monthly Review Press.  1995.
 
  
== See also ==
+
== References ==
{{El Salvador portal}}
+
*Bau, Ignatius. ''This Ground is Holy: Church Sanctuary and Central American Refugees.'' Mahwah, NJ: Paulist Press, 1985. ISBN 0809127202
*[[Latin American culture]]
+
*Bonner, Raymond. ''Weakness and Deceit: U.S. Policy and El Salvador.'' New York: Times Books, 1984. ISBN 978-0812911084
*[[Military of El Salvador]]
+
*Danner, Mark. ''The Massacre at El Mozote: A Parable of the Cold War.'' New York: Vintage Books, 1994. ISBN 978-0679755258
*[[Salvador (film)|''Salvador'' (film)]]
+
*Foley, Erin and Rafiz Hapipi. ''El Salvador.'' Cultures of the World series. New York: Marshall Cavendish, 2005. ISBN 0761419675
*[[Salvadorean diplomatic missions]]
+
*Pearcy, Thomas L. ''The History of Central America.'' Greenwood Histories of the Modern Nations series. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 2006. ISBN 0313322937
*[[Water supply and sanitation in El Salvador]]
+
*Vilas, Carlos. ''Between Earthquakes and Volcanoes: Market, State, and the Revolutions in Central America.'' New York: Monthly Review Press, 1995. ISBN 0853459037
*[[Scouting in El Salvador]]
 
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==
{{sisterlinks|El Salvador}}
+
All links retrieved February 12, 2024.
* [http://www.britannica.com/nations/El-Salvador Encyclopaedia Britannica, El Salvador - Country Page]
 
*{{dmoz|Regional/Central_America/El_Salvador}}
 
* [http://www.linux.org.sv/ Grupo de Usuarios GNU/Linux de El Salvador] (Linux user group El Salvador)
 
 
 
'''Government sites'''
 
* [http://www.casapres.gob.sv/ Casa Presidencial] (Website of the President)
 
* [http://www.asamblea.gob.sv/ Asamblea Legislativa] (Website of the Legislative Assembly)
 
* [http://www.fuerzaarmada.gob.sv/portadafa2.html Ministerio de Defensa Nacional] (Ministry of Defense)
 
* [http://www.fas.gob.sv Fuerza Aerea Salvadoreña] (Air Force of El Salvador)
 
* [http://www.marn.gob.sv/ Ministerio de Medio Ambiente y Recursos Naturales] (Ministry of the Environment and Natural resources)
 
* [http://www.rree.gob.sv/ Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores] (Ministry of Foreign Affairs)
 
* [http://www.minec.gob.sv/ Ministerio de Economía] (Ministry of the Economy)
 
* [http://www.elsalvadorturismo.gob.sv/ Ministerio de Turismo] (Ministry of Tourism)
 
* [http://www.csj.gob.sv/idioma.htm Corte Suprema de Justicia] (Supreme Court of Justice)
 
* [http://www.pddh.gob.sv/ Procuraduría para la Defensa de los Derechos Humanos] (Office of the judge advocate general for the Defense of Human rights)
 
* [http://www.bcr.gob.sv/ Banco Central de Reserva de El Salvador] (El Salvador's Central Reserve Bank)
 
 
 
'''Non- Profits Working in El Salvador'''
 
* Sustainability
 
** [http://www.fssca.net/ The Foundation for Self- Sufficiency in Central America ]
 
  
'''Salvadorian media'''
+
* [https://www.state.gov/countries-areas/el-salvador/ El Salvador] ''U.S. Department of State''
* News sites
+
* [https://www.asamblea.gob.sv/ Asamblea Legislativa] (Website of the Legislative Assembly)
** [http://www.apes.org.sv/ Asociación de Periodistas de El Salvador]
+
* [https://www.bcr.gob.sv/ Banco Central de Reserva de El Salvador] (El Salvador's Central Reserve Bank)
** [http://www.elsalvador.com El Diario de Hoy]
+
* [https://www.cia.gov/the-world-factbook/countries/el-salvador/ El Salvador] ''The World Factbook''
** [http://www.laprensagrafica.com/portada/default.asp La Prensa Grafica]
+
* [https://kids.nationalgeographic.com/geography/countries/article/el-salvador El Salvador] ''National Geographic Kids''
* Television sites
+
* [https://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-19401932 El Salvador country profile] ''BBC''
** [http://www.canal12.com.sv/ Canal 12]
+
* [https://sv.usembassy.gov/our-relationship/policy-history/io/ History of the U.S. and El Salvador] ''U.S. Embassy in El Salvador''
** [http://www.tcs246.com/ TCS]
 
** [http://www.canal21tv.com.sv/ Canal 21]
 
* Business and Info sites
 
** [http://www.miguiaamarilla.com/ Paginas Amarillas y Directorio Negocios](Yellow Pages)
 
** [http://www.losbisneros.com/ Clasificados El Salvador. Compra y Venta](classifieds advertisements)
 
** [http://www.csbr.org.sv/ Camara Salvadoreña de Bienes Raices CSBR](Real Estate Association)
 
  
 
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[[Category:Geography]]
 
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[[Category:Central America]]
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[[Category:Countries]]

Latest revision as of 00:08, 13 February 2024

República de El Salvador
Republic of El Salvador
Flag of Collateral City Coat of arms of Collateral City
Motto"Dios, Unión, Libertad" (Spanish)
"God, Unity, Freedom"
Anthem: Himno Nacional de El Salvador
National anthem of El Salvador
Location of Collateral City
Capital
(and largest city)
San Salvador
13°40′N 89°10′W
Official languages Castilian (Castellano)
Demonym Salvadoran
Government Federal presidential constitutional republic
 -  President Nayib Bukele
 -  Vice President Félix Ulloa
Legislature Legislative Assembly
Independence
 -  from Spain September 15, 1821 
 -  Recognized by Spain June 24, 1865 
 -  from the Greater Republic of Central America November 13, 1898 
Area
 -  Total 21,040 km² (153rd)
8,124 sq mi 
 -  Water (%) 1.4
Population
 -  2023 estimate 6,572,243[1] (109th)
 -  Density 324.4/km² (26th)
840/sq mi
GDP (PPP) 2023 estimate
 -  Total Green Arrow Up (Darker).png$74.05 billion [2] (107th)
 -  Per capita Green Arrow Up (Darker).png$11,647 [2] (114th)
GDP (nominal) 2023 estimate
 -  Total Green Arrow Up (Darker).png$33.75 billion[2] (104th)
 -  Per capita Green Arrow Up (Darker).png$5,308[2] (108th)
Gini (2019) 38.8 [3] 
Currency U.S. dollar2 (USD)
Time zone (UTC-6)
Internet TLD .sv
Calling code [[++5031]]
1 Telephone companies (market share): Tigo (45%), Claro (25%), Movistar (24%), Digicel (5.5%), Red (0.5%).
2 The United States dollar is the currency in use. Financial information can be expressed in U.S. Dollars and in Salvadoran colón, but the colón is out of circulation.[4]
3 On the Coat of Arms of El Salvador, the country's name is written "Republica de El Salvador en la America Central," Meaning "Republic of El Salvador in the Central America"

El Salvador, officially the Republic of El Salvador, is a country in Central America, bordering the Pacific Ocean between Guatemala and Honduras. With a population of over 6.9 million people, El Salvador is the most densely populated nation on the American mainland and is undergoing rapid industrialization. The country was named after the Spanish word for "The Savior," in honor of Jesus Christ.

El Salvador achieved independence from Spain in 1821 and from the Central American Federation in 1839. A 12-year civil war, which cost about 75,000 lives, was brought to a close in 1992 when the government and leftist rebels signed a treaty that provided for military and political reforms.

For many decades, coffee was the mainspring of the Salvadoran economy. The civil war and the fall of international coffee prices in the 1990s pressured the government to develop other export industries, such as textiles, and promote tourism. Among the attractions are Mayan ruins, numerous extinct and active volcanoes, and the Monte Cristo cloud forest.

Geography

El Salvador is located in Central America. It has a total area of 8,123 square miles (21,040 km²), making it almost the same size as the state of Massachusetts. El Salvador shares borders with Guatemala (126 mi / 203 km) and Honduras (212.5 mi / 342 km). It is the only Central American country that does not have a Caribbean coastline. The highest point in the country is Cerro El Pital at 8,957 feet (2,730 m).

El Salvador is the smallest country in continental America. Several small rivers flow through it into the Pacific Ocean, including the Goascorán, Jiboa, Torola, Paz and the Río Grande de San Miguel. Only the largest river, the Lempa River, flowing from Honduras across El Salvador to the Pacific Ocean, is navigable for commercial traffic. Volcanic craters enclose lakes, the most important of which are Lake Ilopango and Lake Coatepeque. Lake Güija is El Salvador's largest natural lake. Several artificial lakes were created by the damming of the Lempa.

Climate

Shaded relief map of El Salvador

El Salvador has a tropical climate with pronounced wet and dry seasons. Temperatures vary primarily with elevation and show little seasonal change. The Pacific lowlands are uniformly hot; the central plateau and mountain areas are more moderate and may even approach freezing.

The rainy season extends from May to October. Almost all the annual rainfall occurs during this time, and yearly totals, particularly on southern-facing mountain slopes, can be as high as 200 centimeters. Protected areas and the central plateau receive lesser, although still significant, amounts. Rainfall during this season generally comes from low pressure over the Pacific and usually falls in heavy afternoon thunderstorms. Although hurricanes occasionally form in the Pacific, they seldom affect El Salvador, with the notable exception of Hurricane Mitch in 1998. El Salvador's location in Central America also makes it vulnerable to hurricanes coming off the Caribbean; however, this risk is much less than for other Central American countries.

From November through April, the northeast trade winds control weather patterns. During these months, air flowing from the Caribbean has had most of the precipitation wrung out of it while passing over the mountains in Honduras. By the time this air reaches El Salvador, it is dry, hot, and hazy.

Natural disasters

A landslide caused by one of the 2001 El Salvador earthquakes

Located on the Pacific's earthquake-prone Ring of Fire and at latitudes plagued by hurricanes, El Salvador's history is a litany of catastrophe, including the Great Hurricane of 1780 that killed 22,000 in Central America and earthquakes in 1854 and 1917 that devastated El Salvador and destroyed most of the capital city. More recently, an October 1986 earthquake killed 1,400 and seriously damaged the nation's infrastructure; in 1998, Hurricane Mitch killed 10,000 in the region, although El Salvador—lacking a Caribbean coast—suffered less than Honduras and Nicaragua. Major earthquakes in January and February of 2001 took another 1,000 lives and left thousands more homeless and jobless. El Salvador's largest volcano, Santa Ana (also known by its indigenous name Ilamatepec), erupted in October 2005, spewing tons of sulfuric gas, ash, and rock on surrounding communities and coffee plantations and killing two people and permanently displaced 5,000. Also in October 2005, Hurricane Stan unleashed heavy rains that caused flooding throughout El Salvador. In all, the flooding caused 67 deaths, and more than 50,000 people were evacuated during the crisis. Damages from the storm were estimated at $355.6 million.

El Salvador's position on the Pacific Ocean also makes it subject to severe weather conditions, including heavy rainstorms and severe droughts, both of which may be made more extreme by the El Niño and La Niña effects. In the summer of 2001, a severe drought destroyed 80 percent of the country's crops, causing famine in the countryside. On October 4, 2005, severe rains resulted in dangerous flooding and landslides, which caused at minimum 50 deaths.

Flora and fauna

Where El Salvador, Guatemala, and Honduras meet lies a nature reserve that protects the Monte Cristo cloud forest, a tropical forest at a high altitude that is usually enveloped in clouds. Towering oak and laurel trees create a canopy overhead, and the high humidity and rainfall creates a habitat for such plants as orchids, ferns, and mosses. Animals found there include spider monkeys, porcupines, anteaters, and opossums. Toucans, nightingales, hummingbirds, and woodpeckers are among the birds.

In the hot, coastal plains grow palm and fruit trees. Reptiles such as crocodiles and turtles, as well as fish, live in the many rivers, lakes, and coastal waters. But much of El Salvador's trees were cut down to export the wood and clear land for farming.

History

The scenic Jiboa Valley and San Vicente volcano.

Mayan ruins have been excavated at Tazumal and San Andre, providing evidence their culture was present in 5000 B.C.E. Aztec and Pipil peoples succeeded them.

El Salvador was known as "Nequepio" to the tribes that inhabited the region prior to the migration from northern Mesoamerica. The Pipils, who arrived from central Mexico, renamed the area Cuscatlán, because of the lushness of the land. Cuscatlán translates as "Land of Precious Jewels."

In the early sixteenth century, Spanish conquistadors ventured into Central America from Mexico. Spain's efforts to extend its dominion to the area that would become El Salvador were firmly resisted by the Pipil and their remaining Mayan-speaking neighbors. Pedro de Alvarado, a lieutenant of Hernan Cortes, led the first effort by Spanish forces in 1524.

Led by a war–leader tradition calls Atlacatl, the indigenous people defeated the Spaniards and forced them to withdraw to Guatemala. Two subsequent expeditions were required—the first in 1525, followed by a smaller group in 1528—to bring the Pipil under Spanish control.

Independence

Toward the end of 1810, a combination of external and internal factors allowed Central American elites to attempt to gain independence from the Spanish crown. The internal factors were mainly the interest the elites had in controlling the territories they owned without involvement from Spanish authorities. The external factors were the success of the French and American revolutions in the eighteenth century and the weakening of the military power of the Spanish crown because of its wars against Napoleonic France. The independence movement was consolidated on November 5, 1811, when Salvadorian priest Jose Matías Delgado sounded the bells of the Iglesia La Merced in San Salvador, making a call for insurrection. After many years of internal fights, the Acta de Independencia (Act of Independence) of Central America was signed in Guatemala on September 15, 1821.

On September 16, 1821, Mexico gained independence as the First Mexican Empire. El Salvador and the other Central American provinces declared their independence from Spain and became part of the Mexican Empire. In 1823, the United Provinces of Central America was formed by the five Central American states. When this federation was dissolved in 1838, El Salvador became an independent republic.

From 1872 to 1898, El Salvador was a prime mover in attempts to reestablish an isthmian federation. The governments of El Salvador, Honduras, and Nicaragua formed the Greater Republic of Central America via the Pact of Amapala in 1895. Although Guatemala and Costa Rica considered joining the Greater Republic (which was rechristened the United States of Central America when its constitution went into effect in 1898), neither country joined. This union, which had planned to establish its capital city at Amapala on the Golfo de Fonseca, did not survive a seizure of power in El Salvador in 1898.

The enormous profits that coffee yielded as an export crop served as an impetus for land becoming concentrated in the hands of several hundred families. A succession of presidents from the ranks of the oligarchy, nominally both conservative and liberal, throughout the last half of the nineteenth century generally agreed on:

    • the promotion of coffee as the predominant cash crop,
    • the development of infrastructure, (railroads and port facilities) primarily, in support of the coffee trade,
    • the elimination of communal landholdings to facilitate further coffee production,
    • the passage of anti-vagrancy laws to ensure that displaced campesinos and other rural residents provided sufficient labor for the coffee fincas (plantations), and
    • the suppression of rural discontent.

As the coffee industry grew, the bulk of the government's financial support came from duties on goods imported with the foreign currencies that coffee sales earned. This support, coupled with corruption, ensured the coffee growers of overwhelming influence within the government.

El Salvador's early history as an independent state—as with others in Central America—was marked by frequent revolutions; not until the period 1900-1930 was relative stability achieved. The economic elite, based on agriculture and some mining, ruled the country in conjunction with the military, and the power structure remained in the control of the "Fourteen Families" of wealthy landowners.

The economy prospered or suffered as the world coffee price fluctuated. From 1931—the year of the coup in which Gen. Maximiliano Hernández Martínez came to power—until he was deposed in 1944, there was brutal suppression of rural resistance. The most notable event was the 1932 Salvadoran peasant uprising, commonly referred to as La Matanza (the massacre), headed by Farabundo Martí and the retaliation led by Martinez's government, in which approximately 30,000 indigenous people and political opponents were murdered, imprisoned, or exiled. Until 1980, all but one Salvadoran temporary president was an army officer. Periodic presidential elections were seldom free or fair.

Football War

Survey marker at the summit of Cerro El Pital

The origins of the Salvadoran civil war lie in the early 1970s. Salvadoran industry and economy had been devastated by the Football War with Honduras in 1969. The roots of this Football War were issues over land reform and immigration. Honduras is more than five times the size of neighboring El Salvador, even though in 1969, El Salvador had a population that was more than double that of Honduras. At the beginning of the twentieth century, Salvadorans had begun migrating into Honduras in large numbers in search of jobs, and by 1969, more than 350,000 Salvadorans were living in Honduras (20 percent of the Honduran peasant population). In 1969, Honduras enacted a new land reform law that took land away from Salvadoran immigrants and redistributed it to native-born Hondurans. Thousands of Salvadorans were displaced.

These existing tensions between the two countries were inflamed by rioting during the second North American qualifying round for the 1970 FIFA World Cup. On July 14, 1969, the Salvadoran army attacked Honduras. The Organization of American States negotiated a cease-fire, which took effect on July 20, and Salvadoran troops were withdrawn in early August.

Eleven years later the two nations signed a peace treaty that put their border dispute before the International Court of Justice. In 1992, the Court awarded most of the disputed territory to Honduras, and in 1998, Honduras and El Salvador signed a border demarcation treaty to implement the terms of the decree.

Civil war

The Football War had a devastating effect on El Salvador's economy. Many Salvadorans had been forcibly exiled or had fled from war-torn Honduras. Most had to provide for themselves, with very little assistance, in a land already dealing with overpopulation and extreme poverty. Trade between Honduras and El Salvador had been disrupted and the border officially closed. The war led to a 22-year suspension of the Central American Common Market, a regional integration project. The social situation worsened in El Salvador as the government proved unable to satisfy the economic needs of citizens deported from Honduras. The resulting social unrest was one of the causes of the civil war that followed.

The war was predominantly fought between the government and a coalition of four leftist guerrilla groups and one communist group known as the Farabundo Martí National Liberation Front (FMLN) between 1980 and 1992. In the context of Cold War concerns about growing Soviet involvement in the Western Hemisphere, the United States gave aid to El Salvador's government.

More than 75,000 people are estimated to have died in the conflict. By 1991, however, a new willingness to cooperate was emerging. A truce was declared in April and negotiations concluded in January 1992. The opposing sides signed peace accords that ended the war, brought the military under civilian control, and allowed the former guerrillas to form a legitimate political party and to participate in elections. A new constitution was enacted.

Politics

The political framework of El Salvador takes place in a presidential representative democratic republic, whereby the president is both head of state and head of government. The president is elected by universal suffrage and serves for a five-year term by absolute majority vote. A second round runoff is required in the event that no candidate receives more than 50 percent of the first round vote. Executive power is exercised by the government.

Legislative power is vested in both the government and the Legislative Assembly. Members of the assembly, also elected by universal suffrage, serve for three-year terms. The next elections will be held in February and March 2009.

A strongly Roman Catholic nation, El Salvador is one of three countries in the world where abortion is illegal with no exceptions, along with Chile and Nicaragua.

The judiciary is independent of the executive and the legislature. Action on peace accord-driven constitutional reforms designed to improve the administration of justice was largely completed in 1996 with legislative approval of several amendments and the revision of the Criminal Procedure Code—with broad political consensus.

Foreign relations

El Salvador is a member of the United Nations and several of its specialized agencies, the Organization of American States (OAS), the Central American Common Market (CACM), the Central American Parliament, and the Central American Integration System. It actively participates in the Central American Security Commission (CASC), which seeks to promote regional arms control. From 2002-2003, El Salvador was chair of the OAS anti-terrorism coordinating body, CICTE.

El Salvador also is a member of the World Trade Organization and is pursuing regional free trade agreements. An active participant in the Summit of the Americas process, El Salvador chairs a working group on market access under the Free Trade Area of the Americas initiative. El Salvador has joined its six Central American neighbors in signing the Alliance for Sustainable Development, known as the Conjunta Centroamerica-USA or CONCAUSA to promote sustainable economic development in the region.

El Salvador enjoys normal diplomatic and trade relations with all of its neighboring countries including Honduras, with which it previously had territorial disputes. While the two nations continue to disagree over the status of their maritime borders in the Gulf of Fonseca, they have agreed to settle their land-border disputes with the International Court of Justice (ICJ). In September 1992, the Court awarded most of the territory in question to Honduras. In January 1998, Honduras and El Salvador signed a border demarcation treaty to implement the terms of the ICJ decree.

U.S.-Salvadoran relations remain close and strong. El Salvador has been a member of the coalition of nations fighting against terrorism and also provided a battalion to the efforts to bring stability to Iraq.

Administrative divisions

El Salvador is divided into 14 departments, which, in turn, are subdivided into 267 municipalities.

Human rights

During the 12-year civil war, human rights violations by both the government security forces and left-wing guerrillas were rampant. The accords ending the war established a Truth Commission under UN auspices to investigate the most serious cases. The commission reported its findings in 1993 and recommended that those identified as human rights violators be removed from all government and military posts. Thereafter, the Legislative Assembly granted amnesty for political crimes committed during the war. Among those freed as a result were the Salvadoran Armed Forces (ESAF) officers convicted in the November 1989 Jesuit murders and the FMLN ex-combatants held for the 1991 murders of two U.S. servicemen. The peace accords also established the Ad Hoc Commission to evaluate the human rights record of the ESAF officer corps.

In accordance with the peace agreements, the constitution was amended to prohibit the military from playing an internal security role except under extraordinary circumstances. Demobilization of Salvadoran military forces generally proceeded on schedule throughout the process. The Treasury Police, National Guard, and National Police were abolished, and military intelligence functions were transferred to civilian control. By 1993—nine months ahead of schedule—the military had cut personnel from a war-time high of 63,000 to the level of 32,000 required by the peace accords. By 1999, ESAF strength stood at less than 15,000, consisting of personnel in the army, navy, and air force. A purge of military officers accused of human rights abuses and corruption was completed in 1993 in compliance with the Ad Hoc Commission's recommendations. The military's new doctrine, professionalism, and complete withdrawal from political and economic affairs leave it the most respected institution in El Salvador.

More than 35,000 eligible beneficiaries from among the former guerrillas and soldiers who fought the war received land under the peace accord-mandated land transfer program, which ended in January 1997. The majority of them also have received agricultural credits. The international community, the Salvadoran government, the former rebels, and the various financial institutions involved in the process continue to work closely together to deal with follow-on issues resulting from the program.

Today, El Salvador is a constitutional, multiparty democracy with an estimated population of 6.9 million. In 2004 voters elected Elias Antonio Saca of the Nationalist Republican Alliance (ARENA) as president for a five-year term in generally free and fair elections. Nationwide municipal and Legislative Assembly elections were also free and fair. Civilian authorities generally maintain effective control of the security forces.

Although the government generally respects the rights of its citizens, protection of human rights is undermined by widespread violent crime, including gang-related violence, impunity, and corruption. The most significant human rights problems included harsh, violent, and overcrowded prison conditions; lengthy pretrial detention; inefficiency and corruption in the judicial system; violence and discrimination against women; abuses against children, child labor, and forced child prostitution; trafficking in persons; discrimination against persons with disabilities; discrimination against indigenous persons; discrimination against persons based on sexual orientation; and lack of enforcement of labor rights.

Economy

The Salvadoran economy has experienced mixed results from the recent government's commitment to free market initiatives and conservative fiscal management that include the privatization of the banking system, telecommunications, public pensions, electrical distribution, and some electrical generation, reduction of import duties, elimination of price controls, and an improved enforcement of intellectual property rights.

By December 1999, net international reserves equaled US$1.8 billion or roughly five months of imports. Having this hard currency buffer to work with, the Salvadoran government undertook a monetary integration plan beginning January 1, 2001, by which the U.S. dollar became legal tender alongside the Salvadoran colón, and all formal accounting was done in U.S. dollars. This way, the government formally limited its possibility of implementing open market monetary policies to influence short-term variables in the economy.

Since 2004, the colón has stopped circulating and is now never used in the country for any type of transaction. In general, there was discontent with the shift to the U.S. dollar, primarily due to wage stagnation vis-a-vis basic commodity pricing in the marketplace. Additionally there are contentions that reverting to the colón would be disastrous to the economy. The change to the dollar also precipitated a trend toward lower interest rates in El Salvador, helping many to secure much-needed credit for house or car purchases.

A challenge in El Salvador has been developing new growth sectors for a more diversified economy. As with many other former colonies, for many years El Salvador was considered a mono-export economy (one that depended heavily on one type of export). During colonial times, the Spanish decided that El Salvador would produce and export indigo, but after the invention of synthetic dyes in the nineteenth century, Salvadoran authorities turned to coffee as the main export. Since the cultivation of coffee required the higher-elevation lands in the country, many of these lands were expropriated and given or sold cheaply to those who could cultivate coffee. The government provided little or no compensation to the indigenous peoples. On occasion, this compensation implied merely the right to work for seasons in the newly created coffee farms and to be allowed to grow their own food. Such actions provided the basis of conflicts that would shape the political landscape of El Salvador for years to come.

Diversification

For many decades, coffee was one of the only sources of foreign currency in the Salvadoran economy. The Salvadoran civil war in the 1980s and the fall of international coffee prices in the 1990s pressured the Salvadoran government to diversify the economy. The government has followed policies that intend to develop other export industries, such as textiles and sea products. Tourism is another industry seen as a possibility. But rampant crime rates, lack of infrastructure, and inadequate social capital have prevented this resource from being properly exploited, and it is still underdeveloped.

There are 15 free trade zones in El Salvador. The largest beneficiary has been the maquila industry, which consists primarily of supplying labor for the cutting and assembling of clothes for export to the United States.

El Salvador signed the Central American Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA) — negotiated by the five countries of Central America and the Dominican Republic — with the United States in 2004. To take advantage of CAFTA, the Salvadoran government is challenged to conduct policies that guarantee better conditions for entrepreneurs and workers to transfer from declining to growing sectors in the economy. El Salvador has also signed free trade agreements with Mexico, Chile, the Dominican Republic, and Panama, and it has increased its exports to those countries. El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, and Nicaragua also are negotiating a free trade agreement with Canada, and negotiations started in 2006 for a free trade agreement with Colombia.

Fiscal policy has been the biggest challenge for the Salvadoran government. The 1992 peace accords committed the government to heavy expenditures for transition programs and social services. The Stability Adjustment Programs (PAE, for the initials in Spanish) initiated by President Cristiani's administration committed the government to the privatization of banks, the pension system, and the electric and telephone companies. The total privatization of the pension system has resulted in a serious burden for the public finance system, because the newly created private Pension Association Funds did not absorb coverage of retired pensioners covered under the old system. The government lost the revenues from contributors and absorbed completely the costs of coverage of retired pensioners. This has been the main source of fiscal imbalance.

Remittances from Salvadorans living and working in the United States are a major source of foreign income and offset the substantial trade deficit. Such remittances have had positive and negative effects on El Salvador. In 2005 the number of people living in extreme poverty in El Salvador was 16 percent, according to a United Nations Development Program report. Without remittances, the number of Salvadorans living in extreme poverty would rise to 37 percent.

While Salvadoran education levels have gone up, wage expectations have risen faster than either skills or productivity. For example, some Salvadorans are no longer willing to take jobs that pay them less than what they receive monthly from family members abroad. This has led to an influx of Hondurans and Nicaraguans who are willing to work for the prevailing wage. Also, the local propensity for consumption over investment has increased. Money from remittances have also increased prices for certain commodities such as real estate. Many Salvadorans abroad earning much higher wages can afford higher prices for houses in El Salvador than local Salvadorans and thus push up the prices that all Salvadorans must pay.

Tourism

Most of the North American and European tourists are seeking out El Salvador's beaches and nightlife. More and more continue to be drawn by El Salvador's turbulent past. The latest tourist attractions in the former war-torn El Salvador are gun fragments, pictures, combat plans, and mountain hideouts. Since 1992, residents in economically depressed areas are trying to profit from these remains.

Demographics

Around 90 percent of the population are mestizo (of mixed Amerindian and Spanish origin). El Salvador is one percent indigenous, mostly Pipil and Lenca. Very few Amerindians have retained their native customs, traditions, or languages, especially in the wake communist-led labor strikes followed by the 1932 government crackdown in which the Salvadoran military murdered up to 40,000 peasants.

El Salvador is the only Central American country that has no visible African population due to its relative inaccessibility to the Atlantic slave trade. In addition, General Maximiliano Hernandez Martinez instituted race laws in 1930 that prohibited blacks from entering the country; this changed during the 1980s and the law was removed. However, Salvadorans with African heritage are present, most notably in San Salvador, the capital.

Among the few immigrant groups that reached El Salvador, Palestinian Christians stand out. Though few in number, their descendants have attained great economic and political power in the country, as evidenced by President Antonio Saca and the flourishing commercial, industrial, and construction firms owned by them.

Spanish is the official language and therefore spoken by virtually all inhabitants (some of the indigenous still speak their native tongue Nahuatl). English is also spoken by many, since a number have studied or lived in English-speaking countries.

Although nominally Roman Catholic, Protestantism is growing rapidly and already accounts for more than 20 percent of the population. Anglican, Presbyterian, Methodist, and Seventh-Day Adventist churches are all growing rapidly, as are Pentecostals, Mormons, and Muslims.

In 2004, there were approximately 3.2 million Salvadorans living outside El Salvador, with more than one million of whom were undocumented immigrants in the United States. By 2007 the Salvadorian ambassador to the United States estimated that one quarter of the nation's population live in the United States.[5] Expatriates send an estimated $2.8 billion in remittances to their families back in El Salvador. Many Salvadoran-Americans are legal immigrants. The United States has traditionally been the destination of choice for Salvadorans looking for greater economic opportunity. Through the Sanctuary Movement of the 1980s, religious activists brought in tens of thousands of refugees from El Salvador to the United States, many suffering persecution from their government for activities related to liberation theology. Salvadorans also live in nearby Guatemala and Nicaragua. Other countries with notable Salvadoran communities include Canada, Mexico, the Cayman Islands, Sweden, Italy, and Australia. The majority of the expatriates emigrated during the civil war of the 1980s due to adverse economic and social conditions.

Culture

The iconic statue of Christ on the globe sphere of planet earth is part of the Monumento al Divino Salvador del Mundo ('Monument to the Divine Saviour of the World') on Plaza El Salvador del Mundo ('The Saviour of the World Plaza'), a landmark located in the country's capital, San Salvador

Spanish is the official language of El Salvador, but many locals speak English. The Roman Catholic religion plays an important role in the Salvadorian culture. Important foreign personalities in El Salvador were the Jesuit priests and professors Ignacio Ellacuria, Ignacio Martín-Baró, and Segundo Montes.

Painting, ceramics, and textile goods are the main manual artistic expressions. Writers Francisco Gavidia (1863–1955), Salarrué (Salvador Salazar Arrué) (1899-1975), Claudia Lars, Alfredo Espino, Pedro Geoffroy, Manlio Argueta, José Roberto Cea, and poet Roque Dalton are among the most important writers to stem from El Salvador. Notable twentieth-century personages include the late filmmaker Baltasar Polio, artist Fernando Llort, and caricaturist Toño Salazar. Amongst the more renowned representatives of the graphic arts are the painters Noe Canjura, Carlos Cañas, Julia Díaz, Camilo Minero, Ricardo Carbonell, Roberto Huezo, and many others.

Cuisine

Pupusas, the national and most famous dish of El Salvador

El Salvador's most notable dish is the pupusa, a thick hand-made corn tortilla (made using masa de maíz or masa de arroz, a maize or rice flour dough used in Latin American cuisine) stuffed with one or more of the following: cheese (queso) (usually a soft Salvadoran cheese called Quesillo con loroco), fried pork rind (chicharrón), chicken (pollo), refried beans (frijoles refritos), and/or queso con loroco (loroco is an edible vine flower bud from Central America). New stuffings such as shrimp or ayote (squash) are used by adventurous restaurants.

Immigrants have brought pupusas to areas such as California, Virginia, Washington, D.C., and other locations. Pupusas are usually served with curtido (a type of either spicy coleslaw or pickled/vinegared cabbage), and a tomato-based sauce. They are eaten with the fingers.

Pupusas come from the Pipil-Nahuatl word pupushahua, which means tortilla filled with cheese, beans, chicharrón (pork cracklin's), ayote, cream, carrots, etc. They were first eaten by the natives almost three millennia ago.

Two other typical Salvadoran dishes are Yuca Frita and Pan con Chumpe (Pavo). The Yuca Frita is deep fried and served with curtido (Salvadoran pickled cabbage salad) with chicharrones or pepesquitas (fried baby sardines) on top. The Pan con Chumpe (Pavo = turkey) is a marinated turkey, roasted and handpulled, submarine sandwich (hoagie) that is sold at local stands and is very tasty because of the many Pipil spices (annatto, clove, allspice, pepper) used to roast the turkey.

Music

El Salvador is a Central American country whose culture is a mixture of Mayan, Pipil, and Spanish. Its music includes religious songs (mostly Roman Catholic) used to celebrate Christmas and other holidays, especially feast days of the saints. Satirical and rural lyrical themes are common. Popular styles in modern El Salvador include salsa, cumbia, hip hop, rap, and reggae.

Notes

  1. El Salvador CIA World Factbook Retrieved May 26, 2023.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 World Economic Outlook Database, October 2022 International Monetary Fund. Retrieved May 26, 2023.
  3. Gini index - El Salvador World Bank. Retrieved May 26, 2023.
  4. Monetary Integration Banco Central de Reserva de El Salvador. Retrieved May 26, 2023.
  5. N.C. Aizenman, "The Face of El Salvador's Charm Offensive: Consul General Uses Personal Touch to Woo Expatriate Community" The Washington Post (January 9, 2007). Retrieved May 26, 2023.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Bau, Ignatius. This Ground is Holy: Church Sanctuary and Central American Refugees. Mahwah, NJ: Paulist Press, 1985. ISBN 0809127202
  • Bonner, Raymond. Weakness and Deceit: U.S. Policy and El Salvador. New York: Times Books, 1984. ISBN 978-0812911084
  • Danner, Mark. The Massacre at El Mozote: A Parable of the Cold War. New York: Vintage Books, 1994. ISBN 978-0679755258
  • Foley, Erin and Rafiz Hapipi. El Salvador. Cultures of the World series. New York: Marshall Cavendish, 2005. ISBN 0761419675
  • Pearcy, Thomas L. The History of Central America. Greenwood Histories of the Modern Nations series. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 2006. ISBN 0313322937
  • Vilas, Carlos. Between Earthquakes and Volcanoes: Market, State, and the Revolutions in Central America. New York: Monthly Review Press, 1995. ISBN 0853459037

External links

All links retrieved February 12, 2024.

Geographic locale

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