Social Sciences, asked by jaskarangun, 1 year ago

what lessons can be learnt from the case of costa rica?​

Answers

Answered by daman3856
1

Explanation:

Costa Rica is a unitary presidential constitutional republic. It is known for its long-standing and stable democracy, and for its highly educated workforce, most of whom speak English.[9] The country spends roughly 6.9% of its budget (2016) on education, compared to a global average of 4.4%.[9] Its economy, once heavily dependent on agriculture, has diversified to include sectors such as finance, corporate services for foreign companies, pharmaceuticals, and ecotourism. Many foreign manufacturing and services companies operate in Costa Rica's Free Trade Zones (FTZ) where they benefit from investment and tax incentives.

Historians have classified the indigenous people of Costa Rica as belonging to the Intermediate Area, where the peripheries of the Mesoamerican and Andean native cultures overlapped. More recently, pre-Columbian Costa Rica has also been described as part of the Isthmo-Colombian Area.

Stone tools, the oldest evidence of human occupation in Costa Rica, are associated with the arrival of various groups of hunter-gatherers about 10,000 to 7,000 years BCE in the Turrialba Valley. The presence of Clovis culture type spearheads and arrows from South America opens the possibility that, in this area, two different cultures coexisted.

Costa Rica is the center of America.

Costa Rica has long been known as a great vacation destination, featuring amazing landscapes from beaches to mountains to incredible rain and cloud forests, with a varied climate that do that always the best time to visit Costa Rica, and more flora and fauna than you’ll know what to do with.

1)Every denomination of Costa Rican cash features a different landscape and animal chosen from Costa Rica’s vast biodiversity, including the white-tailed deer, capuchin monkey, sloth, and blue morpho butterfly, all of which can be easily sighted here.

2)Nicoya, on Costa Rica’s western coast, is a well-known Blue Zone, meaning that its inhabitants commonly live active lives past the age of 100.

3)This affectionate nickname for all Costa Rican people and things was born from a nationwide mannerism of ending diminutives with “tico”, as in “chiquitico”, rather than “chiquitito” as they do in other Spanish speaking countries.

4)The popular beach of Whale Bay, or Bahía Ballena, is actually the shape of a whale’s tail when seen from above. Unsurprisingly, this is also a great spot for whale-watching. Impressive! Isn’t it?

5)We weren’t kidding when we said Costa Rica’s biodiversity was vast. You’ll never run out of wildlife to see here!

6)Costa Rica’s beaches are world-renowned for many reasons, not the least of which is the fact that you can watch the sun rise from the horizon on the Caribbean coast and admire it falling on a beach on the Pacific coast, all in one day!

7)Costa Rica has proudly boasted the absence of a military since 1948, after it was abolished in the wake of victory in that year’s civil war.

8)One of the most important interesting facts about Costa Rica is that the country generates most of its energy using five renewable sources: hydropower, wind, geothermal energy, biomass, and solar.

9)There 5 costa rica volcanoes that are active,they are the Poás, the Irazú, Arenal Volcano, the Rincón de la Vieja, and the Turrialba. And they’re all spspectacular

Answered by gratefuljarette
0

Do not underrate the power of nature and do not keep water for granted are the lessons that can be learned from the case of Costa Rica.

Explanation:

  • Costa Rica is a constitutional republic unitary to the presidency. It is renowned for its long-standing and stable democracy and its highly educated workforce, most of which speak English.
  • The country spends nearly 6.9% of its expenditure (2016) on education, compared to an average of 4.4% worldwide. While heavily dependent on agriculture, its economy has diversified to include industries such as banking, international business services, pharmaceuticals, and ecotourism.
  • Most international manufacturing and services companies work in the Free Trade Zones (FTZ) in Costa Rica where they profit from investment and tax incentives.

Learn more about Costa Rica

What is one way Costa Rica is minimizing the impact of humans on the environment?

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