Economy / Mauritius

How a small island nation became Africa’s business champion

Mauritius has created an economy, government and business environment that outshines the rest of Africa. Now 50 years after independence, Mauritius’ rise has become a success story symbolic to the emergence of an entire continent.

How a small island  nation became Africa’s business champion

View over Port Louis, the capital of the Republic of Mauritius. Photo by spiegelphoto

After centuries under the yolk of French and later British rule, Mauritius gained its independence in 1968 and with it an inheritance of all the worst hallmarks of colonialism. The Indian Ocean archipelago nation was a monocrop sugar-based economy, vulnerable to pent-up ethnic tension, and on the verge of a population surge with too few jobs to provide for everyone. So bad was the situation that in 1961 Nobel-prize winning economist James Meade dismissively said that “the outlook for peaceful development is poor.” 

Meade’s British worldview may have fogged his foresight. As Mauritius celebrated its 50th anniversary of independence last year, his dire assessment is now famous for being so wrong. Mauritius has been lauded an “economic miracle,” not once, but twice – first in the 1990s and then today – for increasing per capita GDP from $400 at the time of independence to $10,500 in 2018, all without any exploitable natural resources. As if to demonstrate credibility for its miracle, Mauritius has in parallel with its economic rise become among the least unequal of African nations. 

Today there are few success stories as symbolic to the rise of Africa as Mauritius. And with new economic status, greater diplomatic clout has followed. Mauritius is now boldly working to readdress British-era disputes by taking on the UK in the International Court of Justice to reclaim sovereignty of the Chagos archipelago, which was sold off in an independence-era deal. 

“Today, services employ 350,000 people in a nation of 1.2 million and the government is now committed to consolidating our competitive advantages.” — Charles Cartier, Chairman of the Economic Development Board 

Adding to a long list of indices on which Mauritius is ranked number one in Africa, including as the most competitive, the most economically free, the most democratic and the best governed (see inside data, pages 4-5), is the nation’s superior magnetism for the rich. Port Louis is now the fastest growing wealth market in Africa, thanks in part to a property market that is increasingly dominated by South Africans looking to “hedge their bets” against volatility at home. In comparison, Mauritius’ GDP growth is predicted to touch just over 4% in 2018 and 2019, while South Africa will hit 1.3% and 1.7%, World Bank data shows. 

While Mauritius’ first “economic miracle” was hinged on the then-emerging manufacturing and tourism industries, today the country’s lifeblood runs on modern services. “About 76% of our national output comes from the services sector, making it a major revenue generator,” observes Chairman Charles Cartier of the Economic Development Board, a new organization created through the merger of three government institutions to promote trade and investment, the ease of doing business, and Mauritius as an international financial center.

“Today, services employ 350,000 people in a nation of 1.2 million and the government is now committed to consolidating our competitive advantages,” Cartier continues. “In the ICT sector, we are promoting high-end activities such as software development and animation, big data analytics, disaster recovery and cloud computing. Mauritius also has all the necessary ingredients to emerge as the regional hub for high-end healthcare services and manufacturing of medical devices. The fashion, entertainment and cinema industries in Mauritius are also experiencing noted growth, especially with registered interest from foreign studios to set up in the country.”

The elixir of education

Many economists after Meade have wondered just how an African island nation with no lucrative resources to speak of could become so developed so quickly. Mauritians found their solution in the 1980s, when unemployment was skyrocketing because the sugarcane industry was unable to absorb new workers. Free education was then provided alongside new industrial zones, enabling textile and light industries to set up and create new jobs. 

Mauritius now provides free tertiary education, free school transportation and free healthcare, including heart surgery, for all. In observing Mauritius, Josesh Stigliz, another Nobel prize-winning economist, asked in 2011: “The question is not whether we can afford to provide healthcare or education for all. If Mauritius can afford these things, America and Europe – which are several orders of magnitude richer – can, too. The question, rather, is how to organize society. Mauritians have chosen a path that leads to higher levels of social cohesion, welfare, and economic growth – and to a lower level of inequality.”

To ensure the success of this well-proven model is maintained, Mauritius plans to continue investing in education, as well as ensuring greater air connectivity, a two-pronged approach to reel in more talent from abroad. “As Mauritius aspires to become a high-income country, we are promoting a knowledge-based and innovation-driven economy,” says Cartier. “We are leveraging on emerging trends to attract and secure top talent. ” 

This, too, is a smart recipe that will not only bring growth but also greater international recognition, to which Mauritius is rightly due.