Poland, Detailed Information and 
					Statistics 
                 
                  Area: 312,685 sq. km of which land 304,465 
					sq. km and water 8,220 sq. km.  
                  
					Latitude and longitude: Poland stretches between 49°00’N (Opolonek 
					mount) and 54°50’N (Rozewie peninsula), and between 14°07’E 
					(Odra river near the town of Cedynia) and 24°08’E (Bug river 
					near the town of Strzyzow). 
                  Land boundaries: 2,788 km 
					of which 658 km with the Czech Republic, 526 km with 
					Ukraine, 456 km with Germany, 444 km with Slovakia, 407 km 
					with Belarus, 206 km with Russia’s Kaliningrad enclave, 91 
					km with Lithuania. Coastline 491 km. 
                
				Elevation: lowest -2 m (Raczki Elblaskie), highest 2,499 m 
				(Mount Rysy in the 
				Tatry Mountains). 
                
				Natural resources: coal, copper, sulfur, natural gas, silver, 
				lead, salt.  
                
				Arable land: 47 percent of which permanent crops 1 percent, 
				permanent pastures 13 percent, forests and woodland 29 percent, 
				other 10 percent.  
					
  
                
				Poland's Population 
				(2012 est.)
                
				38,415,000 of which male 48.4 percent and female 51.6 percent 
				(106.5 women for every 100 men). Age: 14.7 percent age 0-14, 
				71.6 percent age 15-64, 13.7 percent age 65 years and more. 
				Population growth: minus 0.075 percent yearly. Birth rate: one 
				birth per 100 inhabitants. Death rate: 1.024 death per 100 
				inhabitants. Net migration: minus 47 migrants per 100,000 
				inhabitants. Urban population 61.8 percent, rural 38.2 percent.  
                
				Nationality: Polish 96.7 percent, Silesian 0.45, German 0.4 
				percent, Belarusian 0.13 percent, Ukrainian 0.08 percent.  
					
					Legal aliens as 
					permanent residents: 0.2 percent.  
                
				Religion: Roman Catholic 89.8 percent (about 75 percent 
				practicing), Eastern Orthodox 1.3 percent, Protestant 0.3 
				percent, other 0.3 percent, unspecified and non-believers 8.3 
				percent. 
                
				Suffrage: universal from age 18. 
                
				Infant mortality: 6.42 deaths per 1,000 live births.  
                
				Life expectancy at birth: 76.25 years, of which male 72.31 
				years, female 80.43 years. 
                
				Fertility: 131 children per 100 women. 
                
				Languages: 97.8 Polish as the native tongue. Literacy: 99.8 
				percent age 15 and over can read and write.  
					
            
                    
					
					Rynek Glowny central square of
					
					Krakow, Poland. 
                
				Poland's Government 
                
				President as the head of state, council of ministers chaired by 
				prime minister as the executive branch, bicameral National 
				Assembly (the Sejm with 460 deputies and the senate with 100 
				senators) as the legislative branch. Judicial branch consists of 
				the Supreme Court, the Constitutional Tribunal, the Chief 
				Administrative Court, and the local and district courts. 
                
				Administrative divisions: 16 provinces (wojewodztwa, singular wojewodztwo) 
				with local governments – Dolnoslaskie, Kujawsko-Pomorskie, Lodzkie, 
				Lubelskie, Lubuskie, 
				Malopolskie, 
				Mazowieckie, Opolskie, Podkarpackie, Podlaskie, Pomorskie, 
				Slaskie, Swietokrzyskie, Warminsko-Mazurskie, Wielkopolskie, 
				Zachodniopomorskie. Capital: 
				Warsaw. 
                  
					National holidays: Constitution Day May 3, Independence Day 
					November 11. Other major holidays: New Year, January 6th, 
					Easter (Sunday and Monday), May 1st, Whit Sunday, Corpus 
					Cristi, August 15th, November 1st, and Christmas (i.e. 
					December 25th and December 26th).  
                
				Defense: annual military expenditures at 1.9 percent of GDP, 
				about 206,000 active troops in Army, Navy, Air and Air Defense 
				Force, and Special Forces.  
					
                  
					  
					Morskie Oko lake is a
                  must-see of the Tatry Mountains. 
                
				  
                
				Poland's Economy  
                 
                
				Services 63 percent, industry 33.6 percent, agriculture 3.4 
				percent of GDP.  
                
				GDP 1.9 trillion zlotys in 2016. Annual growth rate 4.6 
				percent in 2017. GDP per capita 15,460 euro (the 2011 estimate, 
				purchasing power parity).  
					
					Inflation was 
					3.8 percent in 2011.  
                
				External debt: 236 billion euro by the end of 2011 (est.)  
                
				Budget in 2011:
                revenues 74 billion euro, 
				expenditures 84.8 billion euro. Public debt on the end of 
				2016 was zlotys 0.929 trillion. Proportion of public debt 
				to GDP 50.1 percent in 2016. 
                
				Labor force: 17.9 million. Unemployment 5,3 percent in February 
				2017 according to Eurostat.  
                
				Average wage: 3,075 Polish zloties (PLN) per month before 
				tax.  
                
				Industries: machinery, iron and steel, coal mining, chemicals, 
				shipbuilding, food processing, glass, beverages, textiles. 
				Industrial production growth rate 7 percent in 2011 (est.) 
                
				Agriculture: potatoes, fruits, vegetables, wheat; poultry, eggs, 
				pork, beef, dairy  
                  
					Exports: 151.5 billion euro (the 2011 estimate) of which 
					manufactured goods and chemicals 40.8 percent, machinery and 
					equipment 37.8 percent, food 7.6 percent. 
					Germany 26.9 percent, France 7.1 percent, UK 6.4 percent, 
					Italy 6.3 percent, Czech Republic 6.2 percent, Netherlands 
					4.3 percent.   
                
				Imports: 167.7 billion euro (2011 estimate) of which 
				manufactured goods and chemicals 38 percent, machinery and 
				equipment 36 percent, mineral fuels and minerals 9 percent, food 
				8 percent. Germany 29.1 percent, 
				Russia 8.8 percent, Netherlands 6 percent, Italy 5.8 percent, 
				China 5.6 percent, France 4.5 percent.  
                  
					See information on Poland's currency 
                  
					Transport in Poland
                
				Roads 423,997 kilometers of which 765 km expressways.
                Railways 19,428 km. Waterways 3,997 km. Ports and harbors: 
				Gdansk, Gdynia, Szczecin, Swinoujscie. Airports with paved 
				runways: 86.  
                  
					Education in Poland 
                  
					Free compulsory education for ages 6-19. Free university 
					education. Literacy: universal among those older than 15 
					years.   
                  
					Poland's Participation in International Organizations
                  
					Poland has joined the European Union on May 1, 2004. The 
					country has also been part of the European Union's Schengen 
					Zone of simplified border controls since December 20, 2007.  
                
				Member:
                Australia Group, BIS, CBSS, CE, CEI, 
				CERN, EAPC, EBRD, EIB, EU, FAO, IAEA, IBRD, ICAO, ICC, ICCt, 
				ICFTU, ICRM, IDA, IFC, IFRCS, IHO, ILO, IMF, IMO, Interpol, IOC, 
				IOM, ISO, ITU, MIGA, MINURSO, MONUC, NATO, NSG, OECD, OPCW, 
				OSCE, PCA, UN, UNCTAD, UNDOF, UNESCO, UNHCR, UNIDO, UNIFIL, 
				UNMEE, UNMIL, UNMIS, UNOCI, UNOMIG, UPU, WCL, WCO, WFTU, WHO, 
				WIPO, WMO, WToO, WTO, ZC 
                
				associate: WEU  
                
				observer: ACCT , BSEC, OAS, 
                
				guest: NAM, 
                 
                
				International Agreements on Environment 
                
				Air Pollution, Antarctic-Environmental Protocol, 
				Antarctic-Marine Living Resources, Antarctic Seals, Antarctic 
				Treaty, Biodiversity, Climate Change, Climate Change-Kyoto 
				Protocol, Desertification, Endangered Species, Environmental 
				Modification, Hazardous Wastes, Kyoto Protocol, Law of the Sea, 
				Marine Dumping, Ozone Layer Protection, Ship Pollution, Wetlands.  
                
				Signed, but not ratified:  Air 
				Pollution-Nitrogen Oxides, Air Pollution-Persistent Organic 
				Pollutants, Air Pollution-Sulfur 94, ACTA.  
                	 
                 | 
                   Poland 
                  
                  nation, geography, climate, wildlife, visitors, 
				currency. 
                Poland's history  
				
				
				Krakow 
				
				
				National 
				holidays in Poland 
                 
                Poland's map 
				
  
                 |