
Flag Description of Austria:
three equal horizontal bands of red (top), white, and red

Map of Austria
Geography of Austria
Area: 83,857 sq. km. (32,377 sq. mi.); slightly smaller than Maine.
Cities: Capital--Vienna (2005 pop. 1.63 million). Other cities--Graz,
Linz, Salzburg, Innsbruck, Klagenfurt.
Terrain: Alpine (64%), northern highlands that form part of the Bohemian Massif
(10%), lowlands to the east (26%).
Climate: Continental temperate.
People of Austria
Nationality: Noun and adjective--Austrian(s).
Population (2006): 8,281,948.
Annual growth rate (2006): 0.4%.
Ethnic groups: Germans 91%, Turks, Serbs, Croats, Slovenes, and Bosniasns; other
recognized minorities include Hungarians, Czechs, Slovaks, and Roma.
Religions: Roman Catholic 73.6%, Lutheran 4.7%, Muslim 4.2%, other 5.5, no
confession 12.0%.
Language: German 92%.
Education: Years compulsory--9. Attendance--99%. Literacy--98%.
Health (2006): Infant mortality rate--3.6 deaths/1,000. Life
expectancy--men 77.1 years, women 82.7 years.
Work force (2006, 4.12 million): Services--67%; agriculture and
forestry--5%, industry--28%.
Government of Austria
Type: Federal Parliamentary democracy.
Constitution: 1920; revised 1929 (reinstated May 1, 1945).
Branches: Executive--federal president (chief of state), chancellor (head
of government), cabinet. Legislative--bicameral Federal Assembly
(Parliament). Judicial--Constitutional Court, Administrative Court,
Supreme Court.
Political parties: Social Democratic Party, People's Party, Freedom Party,
Greens, Alliance--Future-Austria.
Suffrage: Universal over 18.
Administrative subdivisions: Nine Bundesländer (federal states).
Defense (2007): 0.8% of GDP.
Economy of Austria
GDP (2006): $322.4 billion
Real GDP growth rate (2006): 3.3%.
Per capita income (2006): $38,925.
Natural resources: Iron ore, crude oil, natural gas, timber, tungsten, magnesite,
lignite, cement.
Agriculture (1.7% of 2006 GDP): Products--livestock, forest products,
grains, sugarbeets, potatoes.
Industry (30.7% of 2006 GDP): Types--iron and steel, chemicals, capital
equipment, consumer goods.
Services: 67.6% of 2006 GDP.
Trade (2006): Exports--$129.7 billion: iron and steel products, timber,
paper, textiles, electrotechnical machinery, chemical products, foodstuffs.
Imports--$130.3 billion: machinery, vehicles, chemicals, iron and steel,
metal goods, fuels, raw materials, foodstuffs. Principal trade partners--European
Union, Switzerland, U.S., and China.
PEOPLE AND HISTORY of Austria
Austrians are a homogeneous people; 91% are native German speakers. However,
there has been a significant amount of immigrants, particularly from former
Yugoslavia and Turkey, over the last two decades. Only two numerically
significant autochthonous minority groups exist--18,000 Slovenes in Carinthia
(south central Austria) and about 19,400 Croats in Burgenland (on the Hungarian
border). The Slovenes form a closely-knit community. Their rights as well as
those of the Croats are protected by law and generally respected in practice.
Some Austrians, particularly near Vienna, still have relatives in the Czech
Republic, Slovakia, and Hungary. About 74% of all Austrians are Roman Catholic.
The church abstains from political activity. Small Lutheran minorities are
located mainly in Vienna, Carinthia, and Burgenland. Small Islamic (immigrant)
communities have arisen in Vienna and Vorarlberg.
Austrian history dates back nearly 2,000 years, when Vindobona (Vienna) was
an important Roman military garrison along the Danube. The city grew through the
Middle Ages and in 788, the territory that is present-day Austria was conquered
by Charlemagne, who encouraged the adoption of Christianity. In 976, Leopold von
Babenberg became the first in his family to rule the territory; the Babenberg
line of succession lasted until the death of Frederick II in 1246. There was a
brief interregnum when the territory was ruled by Otakar II of Bohemia, but in
1276 Rudolf I defeated Otakar II at Dürnkrut and became the first Habsburg to
ascend to the throne.
The Habsburg Empire
Although never unchallenged, the Habsburgs ruled Austria for nearly 750 years. Through political marriages, the Habsburgs were able to accumulate vast land wealth encompassing most of Central Europe and stretching even as far as the Iberian Peninsula. During the 16th Century, the Ottoman Empire gained strength and in 1529, the Ottoman army surrounded Vienna. The Habsburgs held their ground and the Ottomans retreated, to return again in 1683. This time, Vienna was successfully defended by Polish King Jan Sobieski III. To this day Austrians are still proud of defending their territory from the invading Ottomans.
Habsburg rule in Europe was particularly unsettled in the 18th and
19th Centuries, when various wars were fought over their
landholdings. Emperor Charles VI (1711-1740) and his daughter Maria Theresa
(1740-1780) ruled the Empire during these tumultuous times. Maria Theresa was
only able to take the throne as a result of the Pragmatic Sanction, which
allowed a female to ascend when there was no male heir. She became a great
reformer within the Empire, advocating many changes, most notably in the
educational system. Maria Theresa's son Josef II (1780-1790) continued many of
her reforms and he himself has been described as an enlightened absolutist.
In 1848 Franz Josef I ascended to the throne and remained in power until his
death in 1916. With a reign spanning from the Revolutions of 1848 to World War
I, Franz Josef saw many milestones in Austrian history. The Compromise of 1867
allowed some minor sovereignty to the territory of Hungary and created what
became known as the Dual Monarchy. Under the new system, Franz Josef remained
the head of state (Emperor of Austria/King of Hungary), but the Hungarians were
now permitted to have a parliament and legislate on their own.
The old Habsburg Empire slowly began to deteriorate in the beginning of the
20th Century. This deterioration culminated in the June 28, 1914,
assassination of Archduke (and heir to the throne) Franz Ferdinand and his wife
Sophia. This incident sparked the beginning of World War I and assured the end
to the Habsburg domination of Central Europe. In 1919, the Treaty of St. Germain
officially ended Habsburg rule and established the Republic of Austria.
Political Turmoil During the Inter War Years Leads to Anschluss
In the years leading up to the Nazi period, Austria experienced sharpening
political strife among the traditional parties, which since 1918 had created
their own paramilitary organizations. By the late 1920s and early 1930s, these
organizations were engaged in strikes and violent conflicts. Unemployment rose
to an estimated 25%. In line with similar trends among other Central European
countries, a corporatist and authoritarian government came into power in Austria
under Engelbert Dollfuss, who abolished existing political parties and Austria's
Constitutional Court. The Social Democrats, now excluded from the political
process, took up arms, and a brief civil war ensued in February 1934. Austrian
National Socialists (NS) launched an unsuccessful coup d'etat in July 1934 and
murdered Dollfuss. The Nazi leaders were, however, arrested, tried, and received
death sentences. Following this unsuccessful coup, the Austrian President asked
an ultra-conservative Christian Social leader, Kurt Schuschnigg, to form a
government. Like Dollfuss, Schuschnigg sought to appease his neighbors and, at
the same time, obtain support from Britain and France against pressures from
Hitler's Germany, but without success due to the authoritarian trends in Austria
and Austria's poor image in the West. In February 1938, under renewed threats of
military intervention from Germany, Schuschnigg was forced to accept Austrian
National Socialists (Nazis) in his government. On March 12, Germany sent its
military forces into Austria, an action that received enthusiastic support among
most Austrians, and Schuschnigg was forced to resign. He and many other
political leaders were arrested and imprisoned until 1945.
The Holocaust in Austria
The dissolution of the Austrian Empire and consequent loss of territory following World War I, as well as the political strife of the 1930s, set the stage on March 13, 1938, for Germany's Anschluss ("Annexation") of Austria and the beginning of the Nazi period, the darkest chapter in Austria's history, during which most of the Jewish population of the country was murdered or forced into exile. Other minorities, including the Sinti and Roma, homosexuals, and many political opponents of the Nazis also received similar treatment. Prior to 1938, Austria's Jewish population constituted 200,000 persons, or about 3 to 4 percent of the total population. Most Jews lived in Vienna, where they comprised about 9 percent of the population. Following Anschluss, the Germans rapidly applied their anti-Jewish laws in Austria. Jews were forced out of many professions and lost access to their assets. In November 1938, the Nazis launched the Kristallnacht pogrom in Austria as well as in Germany. Jewish businesses were vandalized and ransacked. Thousands of Jews were arrested and deported to concentration camps. Jewish emigration increased dramatically. Between 1938 and 1940, over half of Austria's Jewish population fled the country. Some 35,000 Jews were deported to the Ghettos in Eastern Europe. Some 67,000 Austrian Jews (or one-third of the total 200,000 Jews residing in Austria) were sent to concentration camps. Those in such camps were murdered or forced into dangerous or severe hard labor that accelerated their death. Only 2,000 of those in the death camps survived until the end of the war.
Austria Post World War II
At the Moscow conference in 1943, the Allies declared their intention to liberate and reconstitute Austria. In April 1945, both Eastern- and Western-front Allied forces liberated the country. Subsequently, the victorious allies divided Austria into zones of occupation similar to those in Germany with a four-power administration of Vienna. Under the 1945 Potsdam agreements, the Soviets took control of German assets in their zone of occupation. These included 7% of Austria's manufacturing plants, 95% of its oil resources, and about 80% of its refinery capacity. The properties returned to Austria under the Austrian State Treaty. This treaty, signed in Vienna on May 15, 1955, came into effect on July 27, and, under its provisions, all occupation forces departed by October 25, 1955. Austria became free and independent for the first time since 1938.
Austrian Compensation Programs and Acknowledgement of its Nazi Role
During the immediate postwar period, Austrian authorities introduced certain restitution and compensation measures for Nazi victims, but many of these initial measures were later seen as inadequate and containing flaws and injustices. There is no official estimate of the amount of compensation made under these programs. More disturbing for many was the continuation of the view that prevailed since 1943 that Austria was the "first free country to fall a victim" to Nazi aggression. This "first victim" view was in fact fostered by the Allied Powers themselves in the Moscow Declaration of 1943, in which the Allies declared as null and void the Anschluss and called for the restoration of the country's independence. The Allied Powers did not ignore Austria's responsibility for the war, but nothing was said explicitly about Austria's responsibility for Nazi crimes on its territory. With the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, greater attention was given in many countries to unresolved issues from World War II, including Austria. On November 15, 1994, Austrian President Thomas Klestil addressed the Israeli Knesset, noting that Austrian leaders "... spoke far too rarely of the fact that some of the worst henchmen of the NS dictatorship were in fact Austrians. .... In the name of the Republic of Austria, I bow my head before the victims of that time." Since 1994, Austria has committed to providing victims and heirs some one billion dollars in total compensation.
GOVERNMENT of Austria
The Austrian president convenes and concludes parliamentary sessions and under
certain conditions can dissolve Parliament. However, no Austrian president has
dissolved Parliament in the Second Republic. The custom is for Parliament to
call for new elections if needed. The president requests a party leader, usually
the leader of the strongest party, to form a government. Upon the recommendation
of the Federal Chancellor, the president also appoints cabinet ministers.
The Federal Assembly (Parliament) consists of two houses--the National
Council (Nationalrat), or lower house, and the Federal Council (Bundesrat), or
upper house. Legislative authority resides in the National Council. Its 183
members serve for a maximum term of four years in a three-tiered system, on the
basis of proportional representation. The National Council may dissolve itself
by a simple majority vote or the president may dissolve it on the recommendation
of the Chancellor. The nine state legislatures elect the 62 members of the
Federal Council for 5- to 6-year terms. The Federal Council only reviews
legislation passed by the National Council and can delay but not veto its
enactment.
The highest courts of Austria's independent judiciary are the Constitutional Court; the Administrative Court, which handles bureaucratic disputes; and the Supreme Court, for civil and criminal cases. While the Supreme Court is the court of highest instance for the judiciary, the Administrative Court acts as the supervisory body over government administrative acts of the executive branch, and the Constitutional Court presides over constitutional issues. The Federal President appoints the justices of the three courts for specific terms.
The legislatures of Austria's nine Bundesländer (states) elect the governors.
Although most authority, including that of the police, rests with the federal
government, the states have considerable responsibility for welfare matters and
local administration. Strong state and local loyalties have roots in tradition
and history.
Principal Government Officials
Federal President--Heinz Fischer
Federal Chancellor--Alfred Gusenbauer
Vice Chancellor--Wilhelm Molterer
Foreign Minister--Ursula Plassnik
Ambassador to the United States--Eva Nowotny
Ambassador to the United Nations--Gerhard Pfanzelter
Austria maintains an embassy in the United States at 3524 International Court, NW, Washington, DC 20008 (tel. 202-895-6700). Consulates General are in New York, Chicago, and Los Angeles, and honorary consulates are in Anchorage, Atlanta, Boston, Buffalo, Charlotte, Columbus, Denver, Detroit, Honolulu, Houston, Indianapolis, Kansas City, Miami, Milwaukee, New Orleans, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Portland, Richmond, St. Paul, St. Louis, St. Thomas, Salt Lake City, San Francisco, San Juan, and Seattle.
POLITICAL CONDITIONS of Austria
Since World War II, Austria has enjoyed political stability. A Socialist elder
statesman, Dr. Karl Renner, organized an Austrian administration in the
aftermath of the war, and the country held general elections in November 1945.
All three major parties--the conservative People's Party (OVP), the Socialists
(later Social Democratic Party or SPO), and Communists--governed until 1947,
when the Communists left the government. The ÖVP then led a governing coalition
with the SPÖ that governed until 1966.
Between 1970 and 1999, the SPO governed the country either alone or with
junior coalition partners. In 1999, the OVP formed a coalition with the right
wing, populist Freedom Party (FPÖ). The SPÖ, which was the strongest party in
the 1999 elections, and the Greens formed the opposition. The FPÖ had gained
support because of populist tactics, and many feared it would represent right
wing extremism. As a result, the European Union (EU) imposed a series of
sanctions on Austria. The U.S. and Israel, as well as various other countries,
also reduced contacts with the Austrian Government. After a period of close
observation, the EU lifted sanctions, and the U.S. revised its contacts policy.
In the 2002 elections, the OVP became the largest party, and the FPÖ's strength
declined by more than half. Nevertheless, the OVP renewed its coalition with the
FPÖ in February 2003. In national elections in October 2006, the SPÖ became the
largest party, edging the OVP. On January 11, 2007, an SPO-led Grand Coalition
took office, with the ÖVP as junior partner.
The Social Democratic Party traditionally draws its constituency from blue- and white-collar workers. Accordingly, much of its strength lies in urban and industrialized areas. In the 2006 national elections, it garnered 35.3% of the vote. In the past, the SPO advocated state involvement in Austria's key industries, the extension of social security benefits, and a full-employment policy. Beginning in the mid-1980s, it shifted its focus to free market-oriented economic policies, balancing the federal budget, and European Union membership.
The People's Party advocates conservative financial policies and privatization of much of Austria's nationalized industry. It finds support from farmers, large and small business owners, and some lay Catholic groups, mostly in the rural regions of Austria. In 2006, it received 34.3% of the vote. The Greens won 11.1% of the vote in 2006, becoming the third-largest party in parliament. The rightist Freedom Party traditionally had a base in classic European liberalism. However, after losing much of its support in the 2002 elections and suffering a split, the FPO won slightly more of the vote in 2006--11%--than it did in 2002, due to a populist, anti-immigration theme. The Alliance-Future-Austria (BZÖ) split from the FPÖ in 2005. All the FPÖ's Federal Ministers and most of its parliamentarians joined the BZÖ, and that party formally became the junior partner in the governing coalition. The BZO was unable to draw significant popular support away from the FPÖ, but managed to enter parliament in 2006 with 4.1% of the vote.
ECONOMY of Austria
Austria has a well-developed social market economy with a high standard of
living in which the government has played an important role. The government
nationalized many of the country's largest firms in the early post-war period to
protect them from Soviet takeover as war reparations. For many years, the
government and its state-owned industries conglomerate played a very important
role in the Austrian economy. However, starting in the early 1990s, the group
broke apart, state-owned firms started to operate largely as private businesses,
and the government wholly or partially privatized many of these firms. Although
the government's privatization work in past years has been very successful, it
still operates some firms, state monopolies, utilities, and services. The
Schüssel government's privatization program further reduced government
participation in the economy. The Gusenbauer government will not reverse
privatizations, but does not plan to undertake any further privatizations.
Austria enjoys well-developed industry, banking, transportation, services, and
commercial facilities.
Some industries, such as several iron and steel works and chemical plants,
are large industrial enterprises employing thousands of people. However, most
industrial and commercial enterprises in Austria are relatively small on an
international scale.
Austria has a strong labor movement. The Austrian Trade Union Federation (ÖGB)
comprises constituent unions with a total membership of about 1.2 million--about
31% of the country's wage and salary earners. Since 1945, the ÖGB has pursued a
moderate, consensus-oriented wage policy, cooperating with industry,
agriculture, and the government on a broad range of social and economic issues
in what is known as Austria's "social partnership." The ÖGB opposed the Schüssel
government's program for budget consolidation, social reform, and fiscal
measures that favor entrepreneurs. However, because of a scandal involving a
bank the ÖGB owned, the ÖGB lost much of its political influence in the SPÖ.
Austrian farms, like those of other west European mountainous countries, are
small and fragmented, and production is relatively expensive. Since Austria
became a member of the EU in 1995, the Austrian agricultural sector has been
undergoing substantial reform under the EU's common agricultural policy (CAP).
Although Austrian farmers provide about 80% of domestic food requirements, the
agricultural contribution to gross domestic product (GDP) has declined since
1950 to about 2%.
Austria has achieved sustained economic growth. During the 1950s, the average
annual growth rate was more than 5% in real terms and averaged about 4.5%
through most of the 1960s. In the second half of the 1970s, the annual average
growth rate was 3% in real terms, though it averaged only about 1.5% through the
first half of the 1980s before rebounding to an average of 3.2% in the second
half of the 1980s. At 2%, growth was weaker again in the first half of the
1990s, but averaged 2.5% again in the period 1997 to 2001. After real GDP growth
of 0.9% in 2002, the economy grew again only 1.1% in 2003, with 2001-2003 being
the longest low-growth period since World War II. In 2004, Austria's economy
recovered and grew 2.4%, driven by booming exports in response to strong world
economic growth, but it declined to 2.0% growth in 2005.
Primarily due to higher growth in Europe and continued export growth,
Austrian GDP was a higher-than-expected 3.3% in 2006. Predictions are for the
economy to grow 3.1-3.2% in 2007 and 2.5-2.8% in 2008.
Austria became a member of the EU on January 1, 1995. Membership brought
economic benefits and challenges and has drawn an influx of foreign investors.
Austria also has made progress in generally increasing its international
competitiveness. As a member of the Economic and Monetary Union (EMU), Austria
has integrated its economy with those of other EU member countries, especially
with Germany's. On January 1, 1999, Austria introduced the new Euro currency for
accounting purposes.
In January 2002, Austria introduced Euro notes and coins in place of the
Austrian schilling. Economists agree that the economic effects in Austria of
using a common currency with the rest of the members of the Euro-zone have been
positive.
Trade with other EU-27 countries accounts for about 73% of Austrian imports and exports. Expanding trade and investment in the new EU members of central and eastern Europe that joined the EU in May 2004 and January 2007 represent a major element of Austrian economic activity. Austrian firms have sizable investments in and continue to move labor-intensive, low-tech production to these countries. Although the big investment boom has waned, Austria still has the potential to attract EU firms seeking convenient access to developing markets in central and eastern Europe and the Balkan countries.
Total trade with the United States in 2006 reached $12.0 billion. Imports from the United States amounted to $4.3 billion, constituting a U.S. market share in Austria of 3.3%. Austrian exports to the United States in 2006 were $7.6 billion, or 5.9% of total Austrian exports.
FOREIGN RELATIONS of Austria
The 1955 Austrian State Treaty ended the four-power occupation and recognized
Austria as an independent and sovereign state. In October 1955, the Federal
Assembly passed a constitutional law in which "Austria declares of her own free
will her perpetual neutrality." The second section of this law stated that "in
all future times Austria will not join any military alliances and will not
permit the establishment of any foreign military bases on her territory." The
date on which this provision passed--October 26--became Austria's National Day.
From then, Austria shaped its foreign policy on the basis of neutrality.
In recent years, however, Austria began to reassess its definition of
neutrality, granting overflight rights for the UN-sanctioned action against Iraq
in 1991, and, since 1995, contemplating participation in the EU's evolving
security structure. Also in 1995, it joined the Partnership for Peace with NATO,
and subsequently participated in peacekeeping missions in Bosnia.
Austrian leaders emphasize the unique role the country plays both as an
East-West hub and as a moderator between industrialized and developing
countries. Austria is active in the United Nations and experienced in UN
peacekeeping efforts. It attaches great importance to participation in the
Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development and other international
economic organizations, and it has played an active role in the Organization for
Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE). Austria has participated in the
UN-mandated International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) in Afghanistan since
2002. In August 2005, Austria deployed 93 soldiers to the northern Afghan city
of Kunduz to help support the parliamentary and provincial elections. Austria
has also participated in international reconstruction assistance efforts and has
provided about 8.5 million euros since 2002 to combat drugs, to strengthen
women's rights and for mine removal.
Vienna hosts the Secretariat of the OSCE and the headquarters of the International Atomic Energy Agency, the UN Industrial Development Organization, and the UN Drug Control Program. Other international organizations in Vienna include the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis, the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty Organization, and the Wassenaar Arrangement (a technology-transfer control agency).
Austria traditionally has been active in "bridge-building to the east," increasing contacts at all levels with eastern Europe and the states of the former Soviet Union. Austrians maintain a constant exchange of business representatives, political leaders, students, cultural groups, and tourists with the countries of central and eastern Europe. Austrian companies are active in investing and trading with those countries as well. In addition, the Austrian Government and various Austrian organizations provide assistance and training to support the changes underway in the region.
U.S.-AUSTRIAN RELATIONS
Austria's political leaders and people recognize and appreciate the essential
role the U.S. played in the country's reconstruction and in the Austrian State
Treaty. It is in the interest of the U.S. to maintain and strengthen these
strong relations and to maintain Austria's political and economic stability.
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