Andorra
Antigua and Barbuda*
Australia*
The Bahamas*
Bahrain
Barbados*
Belgium
Belize*
Bhutan
Cambodia
Canada*
Denmark
Grenada*
Jamaica*
Japan
Jordan
Kuwait
Lesotho
Liechtenstein
Luxembourg
Malaysia
Monaco
Morocco
Netherlands
New Zealand
Norway
Saint Kitts and Nevis*
Saint Lucia*
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines*
Solomon Islands*
Spain
Sweden
Thailand
Tonga
Tuvalu*
United Kingdom*
* - These countries belong to the Commonwealth of Nations and still recognize the monarch of the UK as their head of state. This current monarch is Queen Elizabeth II.
a form of government in which one person who inherits or is forced to a throne the leader's power is limited by laws A constitutional monarchy is a form of political government, NOT an economic system. There can be a variety of different economic policies (and economic theories) employed by a country under a constitutional monarchy. So, your question is unanswerable - it depends heavily on what type of constitutional monarchy, and what specific economic policy that constitutional monarchy follows.
the government invented was Constitutional Monarchy
It has a parliamentary government with a constitutional monarcy.Constitutional Monarchy
It is different
Australia is a constitutional monarchy.
Morocco
japan
England is a country with constitutional monarchy.
It is Constitutional Monarchy
Constitutional Monarchy
Holland has a king. However, the country is known as a parliamentary representative democracy as well as a constitutional monarchy. This means that the monarchy does not have complete control over the country.
Japan today has a constitutional, parliamentary monarchy.
No. Spain is a Constitutional Monarchy.
a dumb one!
The Kingdom of Bhutan
Whether a country is a constitutional monarchy or not does not have any bearing on the question of whether you can have dual citizenship in such a country. As a result, the answer depends on the particular country in question and its policy on dual citizenship.
Well it depends on the time period. England is a constitutional monarchy, so is Spain and the Netherlands. Japan is an imperialistic constitutional monarchy. These are only a few of the long list of constitutional monarchies in the world today and in the past.