Economy
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Catalonia is a country of limited
natural resources that owes its prosperity to its strategic
location. The primary economic sector is nearly symbolic - it
employs a mere 3% of the workforce. Nevertheless, it is provided
with some very powerful subsectors that compete all over the
world, as is the case of cava, wine, pigs, fruits or meat products.
The Catalan economy has a very important industrial basis. It
is based on the manufacturing industry, originally textile,
but which has evolved to other sectors such as cars and accesories,
chemicals, food, shipbuilding, furniture, etc. The manufacture
of electrical appliances and last generation computer and telematics
equipment is also becoming increasingly important. Graphic arts
and the publishing industry constitute a decisive sector within
the Catalan industry, as well as construction, whose growth
is directly related to tourist development.
Recently, a wide and diversified tertiary sector has joined
the latter and has also experienced a considerable development.
It is a main contributor to the GDP and employment with services
involving quantity and quality. Here, not only tourism and services
associated with it stand out, but also the great number of companies
working with publicity, the exploitation of new technologies
and the creation of contents for Internet.
In relation to the financial system, the great savings banks,
which constitute the core of the Catalan financial system, have
achieved remarkable centralization and power. They have been
and are crucial in the structure of savings and investments
in the country. Jointly, they put together nearly 70% of the
Catalan private deposits. These savings banks have a decisive
influence on the large Catalan and Spanish companies.
In the Barcelona Stock Exchange, fully integrated into the international
stock exchange system, together with the traditional stock market,
progress is evident in the futures market and the trading of
stocks belonging to small and medium-sized enterprises in a
way resembling the British United Securities Market or the French
Second Marché.