Mauritius has launched its National Fintech Strategy 2026–2030, a roadmap aimed at strengthening digital finance, innovation and financial inclusion.
The strategy was developed by the Ministry of Financial Services and Economic Planning with technical support from the UN Economic Commission for Africa and input from public and private-sector stakeholders.
The government says the strategy is intended to position Mauritius as Africa’s trusted fintech hub while supporting sustainable growth and the wider digital transformation of financial services.
The roadmap focuses on six areas: regulation and innovation, digital infrastructure and cybersecurity, skills development, market growth, international cooperation and consumer protection.
Implementation will run until 2030 and will be overseen through a dedicated governance framework. Planned targets include shorter licensing approval times, expanded digital onboarding, stronger digital infrastructure and training more than 5,000 people each year in specialised fintech skills.
Officials said the strategy responds to the growing role of digital technologies in finance, including digital payments, digital assets, regulatory technology and cross-border financial services.
UNECA said the initiative could support fintech development in Mauritius and offer lessons for other African countries seeking to build more inclusive and competitive digital finance ecosystems.
Why does it matter?
Mauritius’ strategy reflects a wider African policy trend: governments are trying to move fintech from fragmented innovation into structured national development plans. Stronger digital finance ecosystems can expand access to financial services, support small businesses, improve cross-border commerce and attract investment. The focus on cybersecurity, consumer protection and skills also shows that fintech growth depends not only on new products, but on trust, regulation and institutional capacity.
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