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The Nabataeans were the first known
inhabitants of the area that is now
Jordan. The Romans absorbed it into
their empire, as part of the
province of Arabia, in AD 106.
Shortly after the death of the
Prophet Muhammad in AD 632, Arab
armies entered the region and
established the Umayyad dynasty.
However, this became something of a
provincial backwater after the
conquest of Baghdad. During the 11th
and 12th centuries, Jordan was the
scene of some of the major conflicts
between the Christian Crusaders and
Islamic forces. Salah ad Din (known
in the West as Saladin) and his
successors ruled Jordan from his
main seat of power in Egypt from the
late 12th century until they were
displaced by the Mamluks, a race of
mostly Kurdish and Circassian
origin.
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Government
Jordan is a constitutional monarchy
with a bicameral legislature. The
House of Representatives has 80
members elected by universal adult
suffrage for a four-year term. The
second chamber, the House of
Notables, has 40 members appointed
by the king for an eight-year term.
Executive power is held by the king,
who governs with the assistance of a
Council of Ministers. Until 1988,
the Israeli-occupied West Bank was
considered to comprise three of
Jordan’s eight administrative
provinces.
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Jordan’s agricultural sector
produces tomatoes, citrus fruit,
cucumbers, watermelons,
aubergines and wheat, mostly
grown in the fertile ground
along the Jordan Valley.
Phosphate mining and potash
extraction are the traditional
industries, but oil refining,
chemical manufacturing, food
processing, and the production
of metals and minerals also
contribute to this sector.
The service sector accounts for
around two-thirds of total
output and covers wholesale and
retail trading, finance,
transport and tourism.
During the latter years of King
Hussein’s rule, some economic
reforms based on the customary
package of deregulation and
privatization were instituted.
These brought the country’s
rampant inflation under control
but failed to dent the country’s
massive unemployment problem.
These reforms have, by and
large, continued under King
Abdullah.
Many Jordanian workers have
moved abroad in search of
employment and their remittances
are an essential means of
support for many families.
Jordan is a member of various
pan-Arab economic bodies,
notably the Council of Arab
Economic Co-operation and the
Arab Monetary Fund. The
government liberalized the trade
regime sufficiently to secure
Jordan’s membership of the World
Trade Organization (WTO) in
2000, a free trade accord with
the USA and an association
agreement with the EU in 2001;
these measures have helped to
improve productivity. Inflation
in 2005 was 3.5%, while annual
growth was expected to reach
7.7% in 2006. |
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