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Port Louis, capital city of Mauritius.

Foreign investors in real estate boost Mauritius

Foreign direct investment in Mauritius jumped 67.3 per cent to 7.926 billion rupees (HK$1.92 billion) in the first six months of 2014 from a year earlier, helped by a flow of money into real estate, the central bank said.

Foreign direct investment in Mauritius jumped 67.3 per cent to 7.926 billion rupees (HK$1.92 billion) in the first six months of 2014 from a year earlier, helped by a flow of money into real estate, the central bank said.

The island nation has been trying to shift an economy traditionally focused on sugar, textiles and tourism towards luxury real estate, offshore banking and medical tourism.

The largest part of the money went into real estate development, which attracted 3.18 billion rupees in the first six months, up from 2.94 billion rupees a year earlier, the Bank of Mauritius said last week.

France was the biggest source of investment with 543 million rupees followed by the United Arab Emirates which put in 188 million rupees, according to the data.

Ken Poonoosammy, managing director of the country's Board of Investment, said the foreign cash was helping push Mauritius from a dependence on agriculture towards more lucrative sectors.

"In quantitative terms, FDI inflows into Mauritius are not high. Yet they play a significant role in boosting national growth," Poonoosammy said.

The Bank of Mauritius also said the current account deficit rose to 9.64 billion rupees in the second quarter this year although sizeable foreign direct investment inflows allowed for a further build-up of gross international reserves.

It said the current account deficit was almost twice the level reached in the first quarter of the year and 30 per cent higher than the second quarter of last year.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Foreign investors in real estate boost Mauritius
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