SAT Test Centers and Dates in Moldova

By | March 19, 2019

According to the College Board, there are 1 test centers for SAT and SAT Subject Tests in Moldova. Please note that before you register either of the SAT exams, you should choose your test date and test location. Each testing location is affiliated with an educational institution, such as high school, community college, or university. The following test centers administer one or more of 2019 and 2020 SAT tests in Moldova.

SAT Test Centers and Dates in Moldova

2019 – 2020 SAT Test Dates in Moldova

  • March 9, 2019
  • May 4, 2019
  • June 1, 2019
  • August 24, 2019
  • October 5, 2019
  • November 2, 2019
  • December 7, 2019
  • March 14, 2020
  • May 2, 2020
  • June 6, 2020
  • August 29, 2020
  • October 3, 2020
  • November 7, 2020
  • December 5, 2020

SAT Testing Centers in Moldova

CHILDREN’S LIBRARY “I. CREANGA”

Address: 65 Sciusev St., Chisinau, Moldova
Center Code: 58737

More about Moldova

  • GLOBALSCIENCELLC: Modern history of Moldova from World War I to today, covering all major events on politics, economy, society, and technology.

Business

Moldova was a comparatively developed agricultural-industrial region within the Soviet Union until 1991, with the area to the left of the Dniester (Transnistria) in particular being industrialized. The economy is still strongly characterized by agriculture and is geared towards growing grain, sugar beet and sunflower as well as viticulture and fruit growing. The first years of political independence were marked by a severe economic crisis, a sharp decline in economic performance and a deterioration in the social situation. The initially high inflation rate (1993: around 2,700%) was reduced from the end of 1993 after leaving the ruble currency zone and introducing its own currency. With the support of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), it was possible to slow the rapid economic decline in the second half of the 1990s. The market economy reforms showed a positive development from 2000, which was briefly interrupted in 2009 as a result of the international financial crisis. Check beautypically to see Europe Economy.

With a gross national income of US $ 2,180 per resident (2017), Moldova is still one of the poorest countries in Europe. The high foreign debt (2015: US $ 6.4 billion), the widespread shadow economy and corruption as well as the separatist efforts of the Dniester region are hampering economic development. The transfer payments (2015: US $ 228.5 million) of the migrant workers make an important contribution to the gross domestic product (GDP).

Foreign trade: The foreign trade balance is heavily in deficit (import value in 2015: 3.99 billion US $; export value: 1.97 billion US $) and can only be partially offset by remittances from Moldovans living abroad. The most important export goods are food and beverages (especially wine) as well as textiles and electrotechnical products. Above all, energy sources (oil and gas) and other raw materials, machines and systems as well as chemical products are imported. The main trading partners are Romania, Russia, Germany, Italy and the Ukraine.

Agriculture

In agriculture, over a quarter of the workforce generates 14.3% of GDP. Fertile soils and a mild climate offer favorable conditions. Today, agricultural production is mainly carried out by small private farms. Grains (especially wheat and maize), sugar beets, sunflowers, vegetables and aromatic plants are grown. Viticulture and fruit growing (apples, peaches, apricots, plums and cherries) play a central role. In the livestock industry based on the cultivation of forage crops, cattle breeding dominates; also keeping pigs, sheep and horses.

Natural resources

Moldova is poor in mineral resources. Only limestone, gypsum, quartz sand and clay are available in sufficient quantities; the proven deposits of lignite, crude oil and iron ore are very small. Almost all of the raw materials required have to be imported.

Energy industry

Moldova is almost completely dependent on energy and fuel imports, which are mainly from Russia. 80% of the electrical energy generated in the country is generated in the Dnestrovsk thermal power plant. There are two hydropower plants on the Dniester.

Industry

Industry, which employs around 18% of the workforce, generates 14.3% of GDP. The most important branch is the food industry (wines, spirits, canned fruit, vegetables and meat), the textile and clothing industry is also important. The industry is mainly concentrated in Chișinău, Tiraspol, Tighina and Bălţi.

Tourism

So far, tourism has hardly played a role as an economic factor. Some historical town centers and ensembles (e.g. Orheiul Vechi, Soroca, Butuceni, Japca) are considered interesting, and the regional characteristics of the country, which are characterized by ethnic and cultural diversity, are also potentially attractive.

Transportation

Moldova is a transit country between Ukraine and Romania. The railway lines are 1,157 km long and the road network is around 9,400 km. The main transport hubs are Tighina, Bălţi, Ungheni, Chişinău and Ocniţa. There are 558 km of waterways available for inland navigation, mainly on the Dniester. At Giurgiuleşti, Moldova is connected to the Danube by a narrow exit (500 m); an oil terminal has been located here since 2006. The only international airport is near Chişinău.

Vegetation

The forests that once covered a quarter of the country (deciduous forests with oaks and beeches in the higher elevations of the hill country and forest steppes with grasses, bushes and low-growing trees in the lower elevations) now only cover 12% of the land area, especially in the higher, areas with higher rainfall and mainly in the central Moldavian hill country. Forest-steppe spreads in the hilly plains around Bălţi, on the middle and lower Prut, in the South Moldavian plain and on the Podolian plate. Most of the natural steppe has given way to cultivated plants in the last 150 years.