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GDP: US$120.7 billion (2005).
Main exports: Cotton, shea butter, food stuffs, and textiles.
Main imports: Machinery, electrical goods and agricultural products.
Main trade partners: Singapore, France, China, and Côte d'Ivoire.
Burkina Faso’s economy is predominantly agricultural, employing 90 per cent of the population and contributing to approximately half the total output. During years unaffected by drought – a frequent and recurring problem – it maintains subsistence agriculture (sorghum, millet, maize and rice), plus cash crops of cotton, groundnuts, sesame and shea-nuts, red onions, and shea butter, which accounts for 60 per cent of external revenue. Mineral deposits, including gold and manganese, have been located, although comparatively little has been exploited – in August 1999, the country’s largest gold mine was closed as being unviable. Burkina Faso has a small manufacturing sector producing textiles, sugar and flour. New hydroelectric schemes should reduce the country’s dependence on imported fuels. Economic policy has been dominated by the liberalisation measures implemented by the Compaoré government since the late 1990s, with particular stress on the reduction of the state sector, trade liberalisation and attraction of foreign investment. The economy has been growing at approximately 6 per cent annually since 2000, although it is still very poor, with an average annual per capita income of US$300 and depends heavily on overseas aid, particularly from France and the EU. Burkina Faso belongs to the CFA Franc Zone, which fixes the value of the local currency to that of the Euro (formerly the French Franc). Imports outweigh exports in value by a factor of five. Over one-third of exports are bought by France, which provides a similar quantity of Burkina Faso’s imports.
Suits should be worn for government and official business, otherwise a shirt and tie should suffice. Most officials prefer to wear national dress. French is the main language spoken in business circles and if the visitor does not have a command of French, interpreter services should be sought from the British Embassy. Office hours: Mon-Fri 0700-1230 and 1500-1730.

Chambre de Commerce, d’Industrie et d’Artisanat du Burkina Faso
01 BP 502, Ouagadougou 01, Burkina Faso
Tel: 5030 6114 or 6115.
Website: www.ccia.bf




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