

| Outdoor Nylon Flags | |
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2' x 3' |
3' x 5' |
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4' x 6' |
5' x 8' |
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| Indoor Fringed Flags | |
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3' x 5' |
4' x 6' |
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For
Indoor Mountings and Flag Displays CLICK HERE |
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Republic of Trinidad and Tobago
President: A. N. R. Robinson (1997)
Prime Minister: Basdeo Panday (1995)
Area: 1,980 sq. mi. (5,130 sq. km)
Population (1999 est.): 1,102 096 (average annual rate of natural increase: 0.63%); birth rate: 14.5/1000; infant mortality rate: 18.6/1000; density per sq. mi.: 557
Capital and largest city (1995): Port-of-Spain, 52,451
Monetary unit: Trinidad and Tobago dollar
Languages: English (official), Hindi, French, Spanish
Ethnicity/race: black 43%, East Indian (a local termprimarily immigrants from northern India) 40%, mixed 14%, white 1%, Chinese 1%, other 1%
Religions: Roman Catholic, 33%; Hindu, 25%; Anglican, 15%; other Christian, 14%; Muslim, 6%
Literacy rate: 95%
Economic summary: GDP/PPP (1996 est.): $13.2 billion; $10,400 per capita. Real growth rate: 3.1%. Inflation: 3.4% (1996). Unemployment: 16.1% (Dec. 1996). Arable land: 15%. Agriculture: sugar cane, cocoa, coffee, citrus. Labor force: 404,500; manufacturing, mining, and quarrying, 14%; construction and utilities, 13%; agriculture, 11%; services, 62% (1993 est.). Industry: petroleum, processed food, cement, tourism. Natural resources: petroleum, natural gas, asphalt. Exports: $2.5 billion (f.o.b., 1996): including reexportspetroleum and petroleum products, steel products, fertilizer, sugar, cocoa, coffee, citrus fruits, flowers. Imports: $2.1 billion (c.i.f., 1996): machinery, transportation equipment, manufactured goods, food, live animals. Major trading partners: U.S., Caribbean, Latin America, wstern Europe, U.K., Canada.
Member of Commonwealth of Nations