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Sri Lanka on Thursday announced higher returns and residence visas, with immediate effect, for foreigners who invest funds of at least $300,000, in a move to ease pressure on the island nation's rupee currency. The rupee fell around 4 percent last year against the US dollar, squeezed by higher imports and foreign investors' scramble out of government securities. That followed the previous year's depreciation of nearly 10 percent.
"Older people like to spend time in Sri Lanka," Finance Minister Ravi Karunanayake told reporters in the capital, Colombo. "If they can invest $300,000 in Sri Lanka we can offer them resident visas for 2 to 3 years. The investments would boost the country's foreign reserves and help cut reliance on foreign debt, Karunanayake added. Foreigners can invest in stocks, government securities or bank deposits, he said, benefiting from interest rates of around 2 percent to 3 percent on funds invested in Sri Lanka, compared to rates of around 0.5 percent in other countries. Sri Lanka is still recovering from a debt and balance-of-payments crisis last year, but it has adopted economic reforms in line with conditions set by the International Monetary Fund for extending a $1.5-billion three-year loan.

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