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Mali

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The boundaries and names shown on this map do not imply
official endorsement or acceptance by the United Nations

Location: West Africa
Bordering countries: Algeria, Niger, Burkina Faso, Côte d'Ivoire, Guinea, Senegal and Mauritania
Area: 1,240,142 sq. km

Population statistics (based on United Nations sources):
  • Total: 10,960, 000 (1999)
  • Growth rate: 3.28
  • Ratio of males per 100 females: 98.0
  • Age structure (1995 figures)
    • Percentage aged 0-4 : 19.7
    • Percentage aged 5-14 : 27.7
    • Percentage aged 15-24 : 18.9
    • Percentage aged 25-60 : 27.0
    • Percentage aged 60-over : 6.7
  • Population density: 9 per sq. km

Literacy rate: 38.2% (1998)
GNP in US$ billions: 2.6 (1998)

GNP per capita in US$: 250 (1998)
Human Development Index value: 0.380 (1998)
Human Development Index rank: 165 of 174 countries
Gender-related Development Index value: 0.371 (1998)
Gender-related Development Index rank: 137 of 174 countries

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Mali is a large landlocked country in West Africa with an area of 1,240,142 square kilometers and an estimated population of over 11.8 million people, 73% of whom live in rural areas. Mali is considered  one of the poorest countries in the world,  ranking 171th out of 174 by its human poverty and index value. Formerly French Sudan, Mali gained its independence in September 1960.   Most people live in the southern part of the country which has most of the arable land and urban centres.

Cotton is the foremost export, although gold mining is becoming increasingly important. The country has also a large population of livestock (cattle, sheep and goats) and is self-sufficient in fresh water fish. Lack of adequate transport infrastructure remains one of the major obstacles in economic advancement. In 1997, the Malian government continued its successful implementation of an IMF-recommended structural adjustment program that is helping the economy grow, diversify and attract foreign investment. The long existing single party dictatorship was overthrown by the military in March 1991 and the following year Mali had multiparty elections.

Mali's telephone network is at a very low level of development. Only 26,800 telephone lines were connected in 1999, even though the country has a potential capacity of over 42,400 lines. This results in a telephone density of 0.25 lines per hundred population, one of the lowest in the world. The development of telecommunications infrastructure is heavily skewed to the urban areas with 69.9% of the total installed lines in largest cities. The teledensity (telephone penetration per hundred population) for the urban areas is 1.78, compared to 0.08 for the rest of the country.

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