Population | 20.406 billion |
Currency | sikka |
Animal | bat |
The Republic of Chupa Dvesa is a gargantuan, environmentally stunning nation, renowned for its absence of drug laws and punitive income tax rates. The hard-nosed population of 20.406 billion Dvesans enjoy extensive civil freedoms, particularly in social issues, while business tends to be more regulated.
The enormous government juggles the competing demands of Welfare, Spirituality, and Education. The average income tax rate is 53.3%, and even higher for the wealthy.
The Dvesan economy, worth 725 trillion sikkas a year, is quite specialized and led by the Information Technology industry, with major contributions from Pizza Delivery, Uranium Mining, and Gambling. State-owned companies are reasonably common. Average income is 35,529 sikkas, and evenly distributed, with the richest citizens earning only 2.6 times as much as the poorest.
Voting is voluntary, Chupa Dvesa's children are widely acknowledged as the most foul-mouthed in the region, the alarmingly racist TV show 'Bigtopians Say the Darndest Things' is a hit, and military spending is on the increase. Crime is almost non-existent, thanks to a capable police force and progressive social policies in education and welfare. Chupa Dvesa's national animal is the bat, which soars majestically through the nation's famously clear skies.
Chupa Dvesa is ranked 97,040th in the world and 5,244th in Lazarus for Most Advanced Public Education, scoring 2,081.81 on the Edu-tellignce® Test Score.
National Happenings
Most Recent Government Activity:
- : Chupa Dvesa was ranked in the Top 5% of the world for Most Valuable International Artwork and the Top 10% for Highest Foreign Aid Spending, Most World Assembly Endorsements, and Most Stationary.
- : Chupa Dvesa's influence in Lazarus rose from "Sprat" to "Shoeshiner".
- : Chupa Dvesa's influence in Lazarus fell from "Shoeshiner" to "Sprat".
- : Chupa Dvesa's influence in Lazarus rose from "Sprat" to "Shoeshiner".
- : Chupa Dvesa's influence in Lazarus fell from "Shoeshiner" to "Sprat".
- : Chupa Dvesa's influence in Lazarus rose from "Sprat" to "Shoeshiner".
- : Chupa Dvesa's influence in Lazarus fell from "Shoeshiner" to "Sprat".
- : Chupa Dvesa's influence in Lazarus rose from "Sprat" to "Shoeshiner".
- : Chupa Dvesa's influence in Lazarus fell from "Shoeshiner" to "Sprat".
- : Chupa Dvesa's influence in Lazarus rose from "Sprat" to "Shoeshiner".