Country Profile Portugal Contents Welcome 1 Section 1: Background information 2 The territory 2 Map of Portugal 2 Geography 3 Climate 3 The capital city: Lisbon (Lisboa) 4 The people 5 Demography 5 Distribution 5 Language 6 Religion 6 Social customs and modes of address 6 The state 7 History 7 Government 8 International relations 8 The economy 9 Employment and standard of living 11 Section 2: Before you go 12 Cross-cultural preparation and language tuition 12 Travel 13 Getting there 13 Internal travel 15 Driving licence and car insurance 17 Immigration procedures 18 Passports and visas 18 Health regulations 19 Working in Portugal 20 Hotels 20 Health and hygiene 22 Risks and precautions 22 Medical facilities 22 Medical and repatriation insurance 23 Further information 24 Clothing 25 The working environment 25 © Employment Conditions Abroad Limited 2001 Portugal Country Profile Business practices 25 Local time 26 Hours of business 27 Public holidays 27 Money 28 Currency unit and exchange rate 28 Credit cards 28 Currency controls 28 Banks 29 Tipping 30 Communications 30 Post 30 Telephone 31 Fax 32 Internet 32 Broadcasting 32 Newspapers 34 Section 3: On arrival 35 Customs formalities 35 Personal effects 35 Cars 36 Pets 36 Prohibited items 36 Setting up home 37 Registration and residence permits 37 Accommodation 37 Estate agents/realtors 42 Utilities 43 Domestic staff 44 Security and insurance 45 Education 45 Shopping 51 Weights and measures 51 Facilities 52 Value added tax 53 Food and drink 54 Quality and availability 54 Restaurants 54 Recreation 55 Sports and social clubs 56 Home country rights and duties 56 Addresses and information sources 57 Foreign representation 57 Representation overseas 58 Trade and travel organisations 58 Further health information 58 Information for expatriates 60 Background reading 61 © Employment Conditions Abroad Limited 2001 Portugal Country Profile Welcome This guide is a complete and up-to-date package of information intended to brief as well as advise expatriate managers involved in planning business trips and short- or long-term assignments for employees. It will also prove to be an informative and valuable guide for employees during their first few weeks and months on assignment. We have made every effort to ensure that the information contained in this report is as accurate and up-to-date as possible at the time of going to press. We are conscious of the fact that events in countries are continuously changing and we welcome comments and suggestions from our readers which will help us in preparation for the next edition. If you feel that we have omitted any useful information, or perhaps included something that is no longer accurate, please write and tell us; address your letter to: The Editor, Country Profiles, ECA International, Anchor House, 15 Britten Street, London SW3 3TY UK (e-mail: editorsp@eca- international.com; web site: www.eca-international.com). To make it easier for readers to find their way around the text, we have a comprehensive system of cross- references. In addition, we have highlighted important information through the use of graphical icons. The reader should become familiar with the following icons so that essential information can be picked out quickly: Checklist of useful information prior Useful telephone numbers to departure Caution advised Cross-reference Important advice IMPORTANT Employment Conditions Abroad Limited is not responsible for the content of external web sites referred to in this publication. © Employment Conditions Abroad Limited 2001 1 Portugal Country Profile Section 1: Background information The territory Map of Portugal © Employment Conditions Abroad Limited 2001 2 Portugal Country Profile Geography The Portuguese Republic lies on the Atlantic side of the Iberian Peninsula in south-west Europe. It is bounded to the north and east by Spain and to the south and west by the Atlantic Ocean, having a coastline of 844 km. The country is roughly 560 km long and up to 200 km wide; the total land area of Continental Portugal is 92 080 km2 while the Portuguese archipelagos of Madeira and the Azores measure 794 and 2 250 km2 respectively. Madeira lies 900 km south-west of Europe, the Azores in mid-Atlantic, west of Portugal. Almost a third of the land area is forest and woodland and 43% is cropland or pasture. The country falls into three geographical zones, corresponding with the climatic areas. The northern half of the country is mountainous and wooded, with peaks rising to over 1 000 m in the north-east in the province of Tras-os-Montes. There are vines growing everywhere, the source of the famous Vinho Verde; the countryside is verdant and rivers (the main ones are the Minho and the Douro) and streams abound. The central part of the country comprises the provinces of Estremadura, Beira Baixa and Ribatejo. The main river is the Mondego which rises in the Serra da Estrêla; a tributary, the Dão after which the wine is named. A large part of the area is a plain where wheat, vines, olives and vegetables are grown. Towards the coast are forests of pine, chestnut and oak. Rolling, arid plains cover much of the south, down to the hills behind the Algarve. The vegetation is sparse, enough for flocks of sheep and goats; olives, almonds and cork oak grow well. The principal river is the Guadiana, while the Sado which runs, like most Portuguese rivers, from east to west, is a valuable source of irrigation. Climate Continental Portugal has three distinct climatic zones which correspond with the geographical ones. The north- west, exposed to moist winds from the Atlantic, has abundant rainfall (more than 127 cm annually) although the months of June to August are generally dry; winters are mild and summers short but warm. There is a more extreme and somewhat drier climate in the north-east, with long, cold winters and hot summers. Elsewhere, a Mediterranean climate predominates, with mild, showery winters, pleasant springs and autumns, and long, hot summers. © Employment Conditions Abroad Limited 2001 3 Portugal Country Profile Climate data: Lisbon (Portugal) Month Temp. oC (oF) Temp. oC (oF) Humidity % Rainfall Min. Max. am (pm) mm Jan 7 (44) 15 (59) 83 (72) 111 Feb 8 (46) 14 (57) 80 (66) 76 Mar 9 (48) 16 (60) 76 (63) 109 Apr 11 (51) 18 (64) 69 (58) 54 May 13 (55) 21 (69) 67 (57) 44 Jun 16 (60) 24 (75) 64 (53) 16 Jul 16 (60) 28 (82) 61 (48) 3 Aug 18 (64) 27 (80) 61 (46) 4 Sep 17 (62) 24 (75) 67 (53) 33 Oct 14 (57) 21 (69) 72 (59) 62 Nov 11 (51) 17 (62) 80 (68) 93 Dec 8 (46) 14 (57) 83 (72) 103 Detailed world-wide, daily and long-range/five-day forecasts are available on-line from a number of organisations including BBC Weather (web site: www.bbc.co.uk/weather) and CNN (web site: www.cnn.com/WEATHER). The capital city: Lisbon (Lisboa) Built on a series of hills, Lisbon overlooks the wide estuary of the River Tejo (Tagus) in south-west Portugal. It is the seat of government and the centre of the country’s import trade, with a large, well-equipped port and many industrial activities. The low-lying centre of Lisbon was devastated by an earthquake and tidal wave in 1755. It was rebuilt by the Marquis de Pombal, chief minister of King Jose I, as a district of broad avenues and plain, stately buildings, and it was the Chiado shopping area in this district that was destroyed by fire in 1988. This has now been renovated. Older properties are being repaired and refurbished whilst the city authorities are encouraging people to return to live in the city’s commercial centre. Unsightly posters and graffiti have been removed and buildings cleaned: Rossio railway station is being restored as a gem of 19th century architecture. A great deal of building work was carried out in readiness for the city to be the Cultural Capital in 1994. Further building and infrastructure improvements such as the new 12 km Vasco da Gama bridge over the Tejo were constructed for Expo ’98, a world fair dedicated to preserving the oceans. A 330-hectare derelict dockland area is being redeveloped as a new residential and business hub for the city, for completion by 2015. Medieval neighbourhoods climb the surrounding hills and ridges: Alfama, the oldest, to the east, Bairro Alto and Madragoa to the west, Mouraria and Graca, survived both natural and man-made disasters and are very picturesque but run-down; they are a maze of steep alleys, cobbled and car-free. The huge Monsanto Parque is the city’s largest open space and is split by the autostrada to Estoril/Cascais; other parks include the Botanical Gardens (Jardim Botanico), the Parque Edouardo VII: the highest part gives good views over the city, and the Jardim da Estrella. Trams are an excellent, but slow moving, way of seeing the city. For pedestrians, there are lifts to get up and down the steepest hills. Lisbon’s streets are very congested and ample time should be allowed for travel. Suburban train services are good, to Cascais and Estoril where the majority of expatriates tend to live, and to Sintra. © Employment Conditions Abroad Limited 2001 4 Portugal Country Profile Outside the city are huge slums (bairros - districts) where around 300 000 people live, the majority without sanitation or electricity. Each bairro has its own ethnic flavour - not only from Portugal but Mozambique, Cape Verde, Macau and, most recently, East Timor. The people Demography The population of Continental Portugal totals 9.79 million, including 750 000 retornados, returnees from Portugal’s former colonies. There are around 173 000 resident foreigners, many of whom are retired. The population growth rate has fallen rapidly in recent years, to a current 0.7%. Twenty-one per cent are under the age of 15 and 13% over 65. Life expectancy at birth is 71.8 for men and 78.8 for women. Population density is 110 per km2 and a third are urban-dwelling (which is very low by European standards). Migrant workers have been returning from Western European countries in ever-increasing numbers (up to 50 000 a year in recent years); some were forced back because they lost their jobs in Germany or France but many have saved enough to realise their dream of returning home to their family land in Portugal where they build themselves a new house and, in many instances, start a small business - garage, car repairs, shop, cafe - run in conjunction with their small-holding to provide employment for their extended family. Distribution Lisbon, with a population of over 2.4 million (including suburbs), is the capital city and seat of government. It is by far the most important centre for Portugal’s import trade and was, for centuries, the centre for produce from overseas territories. There are extensive port installations, shipyards, a steelworks and oil refinery, engineering firms and factories producing textiles and knitwear, cement, chemicals and fertilisers, soap, vegetable oils, pottery, rubber goods and cork products. Nearby Setúbal has been the major recipient of foreign investment where a 400-hectare industrial park, to be known as Silicon Bay, is under construction. Oporto (known locally as Porto) has a population of around 400 000 and is the major industrial city in the north, the centre of the cotton textile industry and the port through which all the country’s exports of port wine pass. It is also the hub of Portugal’s small-business sector. The Oporto area, including Vila Nova de Gaia, has a population of 1.3 million. Other industries include metal goods, engineering, electronic components, ceramics, textiles, garments and knitwear, shoes and jewellery. Many leading banks have their headquarters in the city. Oporto is one of the European Capitals of Culture 2001 (web site: www.porto2001.pt). Coimbra (population 72 000) on the banks of the River Mondego, has the oldest university in Portugal. The city has fine Romanesque and baroque buildings and is also famous for the superb Roman mosaics which have been excavated from nearby Conimbriga. Matozinhos (27 000) is a centre for fishing and fish-preserving industries in the north. Faro (35 000) and Vila Real de Santo Antonio (15 000), on the southern coast of the Algarve, are the fishing centres of the south. Covilha (23 000), with nearby Tortozendo, is the centre of a declining woollen textile industry. © Employment Conditions Abroad Limited 2001 5 Portugal Country Profile Other centres of population include Braga (64 000), which has soap, knitwear and other industries, Aveiro (29 000) - important centre for fishing, agriculture and mining, ceramics, engineering and textiles, Leiria (11 000) (plastics and ceramics), Marinha Grande (21 000) (glass) and Evora (34 000), an historic market town on the road to Seville. The Azores have a population of around 243 200 and Madeira has a population of 258 600. The capital is Funchal. The islands are heavily dependent on tourism although with EU help an International Business Centre and a free-trade industrial zone have been developed. Language Portuguese, which is the official language, is somewhat similar to Spanish except in pronunciation. Thus anyone with a knowledge of Spanish is likely to be able to read Portuguese with ease but will probably not understand the spoken language without practice. This is mainly because the language is spoken so quickly and words slur into one another. A few words and phrases in Portuguese are appreciated but not expected. Many Portuguese understand Spanish but their national pride is easily offended by its use. It is preferable to start a conversation in English or French rather than Spanish. French and English are widely spoken in business circles, and English is also widely understood in the resorts of the Algarve. For a lengthy stay in Portugal a working knowledge of the language is desirable, not least for the inevitable dealings with Portuguese bureaucracy. Refer to ‘Cross-cultural preparation and language tuition’, page 12. Religion The vast majority of Portuguese are Roman Catholics (over 95%) and the church is a powerful institution. Traditional festivals, both religious and secular, play an important part in the social life of the nation. In the main towns there are places of worship that hold services in English. Social customs and modes of address Social customs The Portuguese are friendly and courteous and their way of life is leisurely; life moves slowly and there is little sense of urgency in getting things done. They have formal manners and appreciate courtesies, such as leaving cards after an introduction or returning thanks for hospitality. Please (se faz favor) and thank you (obrigado/obrigada) should be used whenever possible. They themselves are not always punctual, although they expect foreign visitors to be. Portuguese society is still very much male-orientated. It is comparatively rare for married women of the middle and upper classes to work outside the home, and few women gain positions of responsibility. © Employment Conditions Abroad Limited 2001 6 Portugal Country Profile The Portuguese have an ingrained suspicion of Spain and the Spanish and prefer their part of Europe to be described as the Luso-Spanish Peninsular rather than the Iberian Peninsula. Many Portuguese smoke, but smoking is banned in cinemas, theatres and on buses. In restaurants, it is customary to smoke only at the end of the meal. The custom of the siesta continues and some shops still close between 12.30 and 15.00 but offices normally take only an hour or so for lunch. However, there are moves to integrate Portugal into more mainstream commercial hours of operation. Modes of address Professional titles should be used: Doctor, Enginheiro etc. Otherwise, people should be addressed as senhor (Mr) or senhora (Mrs). The state History The early history of Portugal was that of the Iberian peninsula as a whole, most of the country being incorporated with part of western Spain in the Roman province of Lusitania. The peninsula was over-run by the Visigoths, followed by the Moors who were defeated in 1147 when Lisbon was retaken. Alfonso I was proclaimed King in 1139, though the Moors were not finally driven out of the country for another century. The alliance between England and Portugal was confirmed in 1386 when King John I of Portugal married the daughter of John of Gaunt, and heralded the most illustrious period of Portuguese history. Their son, Prince Henry the Navigator, initiated many voyages of exploration; the Cape of Good Hope was rounded by Bartholomew Diaz (1488), the route to India was discovered by Vasco de Gama (1498) and Brazil was acquired in 1500; Madeira, the Azores and the Cape Verde Islands were colonised and the Portuguese Empire was founded. However, in 1580 Philip II of Spain seized the throne and Portuguese independence was not again recognised by Spain until 1640. The country suffered severely in the War of the Spanish Succession (1702-14) and the Peninsular War (1810-12), and later from civil war and dictatorships, and Brazil was lost. 1910: Portugal became a republic, following a revolution against the monarchy. 1910-32 there was a succession of coup d’états which threw the country into constant turmoil. Political stability was established after Antonio de Oliveira Salazar came to power. The 1933 Constitution provided for a one-party state; Dr Salazar ruled as virtual dictator until ill health forced his resignation in 1968. His successor, Marcello Caetano, attempted to modernise industry and initiate closer political/economic ties with the developed world while trying to retain Portugal’s autocratic political system and colonial possessions. Costly wars in Angola/Mozambique resulted in Portugal’s economy becoming virtually bankrupt. Within Portugal, these policies culminated in the bloodless revolution of April 1974, carried out by radical officers (MFA) of the Portuguese army. © Employment Conditions Abroad Limited 2001 7 Portugal Country Profile African territories of Guinea-Bissau, Angola/Mozambique, together with East Timor in the East Indies, achieved self-government after conflict with the former governing Portuguese forces. The former colony of Macau reverted to Chinese rule in December 1999. Portugal suffered considerable political instability, having 16 governments in 13 years to 1987. Government Sovereignty is divided between the President, the Assembly of the Republic and the Government. The President is elected for a five-year term by popular vote and appoints the Prime Minister and with the Prime Minister’s agreement, the Council of Ministers. The Council of State is primarily a consultative body. The Assembly has 230 members (to be reduced to between 180 and 200), elected by universal adult suffrage for a term of four years (subject to dissolution). Mainland Portugal is divided into 18 administrative districts. The Azores and Madeira have had a degree of autonomy since 1976. Main political parties include the Socialist Party (PS), Social Democratic Party (PSD), Communist Party (PCP), Popular Party (PP) and the Left Bloc (BE). Recent events A presidential election took place in January 2001. The Socialist candidate, Jorge Sampaio, was re-elected for a second and final term. A general election was held in October 1999. The governing Socialists were returned to power for a second four- year term, narrowly failing to achieve an overall majority in Parliament. Prime Minister António Guterres announced his intention to govern without seeking pre-arranged alliances with either the left or right. Next elections are due by the autumn of 2003. International relations Portugal is a member of the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO) and the Western European Union and became a full member of the European Community (now EU) in 1986. It saw membership of the latter as the country’s salvation from economic depression and has become far more Europe-minded than at any time in its previous history. Portugal was among the first states to join the Single European Currency in January 1999. Relations with Spain have not always been good. Three of Portugal’s major rivers, the Tejo, Douro and Guadiana, rise in Spain and the amount of water allowed to flow out of Spain is a sensitive issue, especially in the wake of a drought which has affected much of the peninsula. Both countries are heavily reliant on irrigation for agriculture. Portugal has a special relationship with Brazil, but this is currently under severe strain over Portugal’s treatment of illegal immigrants from Brazil. Ties with former colonies in Africa (Angola and Mozambique) remain strong and Portugal has tried to help both countries with aid and with peace negotiations. The Portuguese territory of Macau reverted to Chinese administration in December 1999. Relations with Indonesia remain strained over the issue of East Timor. © Employment Conditions Abroad Limited 2001 8
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