Manaus Brazil a Tropical Metropolis Popular with Foreign Investors

Oct 25
10:30

2012

Paul Dexter

Paul Dexter

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Manaus is the hugh Brazilian tropical Metropolis that's becoming very popular with foreign investors, especially real estate developers who see the area as a future holiday destination for people looking for a tropical feel.

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Of all the cities in Brazil perhaps the most unusual is Manaus,Manaus Brazil a Tropical Metropolis Popular with Foreign Investors Articles riverside capital of the state of Amazonas. As that description suggests, it has a untypical location (and indeed reputation) sited as it is near (practically on) the mighty River Amazon and in the midst of the historic rainforest. It's also quite remote, considering its size. The metropolitan area is very nearly two thousand Kilometres from the national capital, Brasilia. It's a bit more than that to either Rio de Janiero or Sao Paolo and the trip to both takes nearly four hours by air.

The settlement goes back a very long way in time. The earliest recorded existence is way back in 1669 when (very!) early Portuguese explorers/colonists established a fort and trading post. Things slowly developed from there and the growing settlement was officially constituted as a town –called 'Manaus' (“mother of the gods” in a local tongue)- in 1832. Just sixteen years later they achieved the next step, status as a fully-fledged city.

The city and its surrounding area really took off in the late nineteenth century. This was almost entirely due to the rubber industry boom, where for a while the producers round here enjoyed a virtual world monopoly. The city became very wealthy, very quickly. It quickly acquired all the trappings of ostentatious wealth; huge mansions, expensive public buildings, a magnificent opera house (the 'Teatro Amazonas')and so on.Inevitably though, plants and seeds were successfully smuggled out to other areas and countries (e.g. Malaya) and the area lost its dominance in the industry and its position as an economic powerhouse.For quite a while, though, the city boomed and many fortunes were made and millionaires created. Eventually however things went rapidly to the other extreme and real poverty struck for many people.

Since then there's been a healthy recovery based on a duty-free regime, a fact that's of interest (and great relief) to long term investment providers in this part of the country and come to think of it short term investment too. Both levels of course demonstrate a vibrant combination of both domestic and international finance. So, nowadays the city has bounced back from its slump to such an extent that its metropolitan area, with 2.3 million people, is the largest in northern Brazil. Its GDP contributes about 1.5 percent of the whole country's GDP which is about average for Brazil on a person-by-person basis. The area also accounts for almost exactly half of the entire Amazon regional population. To a large extent, economic prosperity is grounded on the Manaus Free Trade Zone, a federally approved initiative which has proved popular in Brazil to say the least and is directly responsible for nearly a hundred thousand jobs within the zone and more than twice as many again outside it.

Weather is unusual for this kind of terrain and vegetation. There are distinct wet and dry seasons. So, instead of having a typical tropical rainforest ('jungle') climate the local pattern is more usually categorised as more of a monsoon type. year round average temperatures are in excess of 30 degrees Celsius making this a very popular area for investors looking to build hotels and resorts aimed at holiday makers looking to get that tropical feeling from their surroundings. Anyone looking to Invest In Brazil, Especially in property and real estate should consider this area as a number of investment news websites and publications are already promoting the area as one of the top emerging Brazilian investment spots of 2013.