The most developed country in continental Central America is Costa Rica. If you include islands, Cuba and Trinidad are also doing pretty well. Really the most developed country in Central America is Panama, has one of the biggest banking system not only in Central America but in Latin America, is the only country in Latin America with a Waldorf Hotel, the capital has some of the tallest building in Latin America, right now the Panama Canal is being widen with an investment of 5 billion
dollars, they building the subway system, the airport has volume of 6 million passenger and just open a new terminal and is expect to has 9 million in 2012, has the free trade zone that is just the second in the World after Hong Kong, and is one of the main destinations for retires of the USA. Has one of the Health System most advanced in Latin America, the unemployment is really low.
Panama would qualify as such. It has the highest GDP per capita (2015) in the region:
For reference, the US' GDP per capita is US$ 55,800.
honduares
Costa Rica
Panama
northeast
Biomass
Monaco
They are not extensively industrialized. Their economies rely heavily on exports.
Asia, north and south America, Africa
They are not extensively industrialized
The Ruhr area and the Area Between Frankfurt and Stuttgart are heavily industrialized.
The US was the only industrialized nation not bombed (heavily) during WW2. Our factories were able to build war material un-interrupted.
"China has become an industrial giant." or if you want you can write it like that: '' China is a industrial giant ''
People being dependent on one another. (APEX)
Cocobolo, popularly called rosewood, grows from Mexico south to Central and South America. The wood has been heavily harvested and is rare in the wild.