Vote counting has started in Madagascar where citizens cast their ballots with hopes that a new leader will take the Indian Ocean island nation out of chronic poverty and corruption.

Polls closed after a day of generally calm and uneventful voting.

The 36 presidential candidates have all promised to improve the country’s economy, create new jobs and end corruption, but the three leaders in the race are familiar faces who offer little chance of a dramatic change, say political analysts.

“I was looking forward to this election because the misery in Madagascar is everywhere! Our country is rich! Why are the Malagasy people, for the most part, poor?” said Judith Rasolofo, 52, a housewife with five children.

Madagascar Elections
Ballots are counted (Kabir Dhanji/AP)

“I want to see something new in Madagascar!”

Bruno Bezara said he came to vote first thing in the morning.

“I was in a hurry to come and vote because it’s very important,” said Mr Bezara, 65.

“I want change because there are many things that do not work in our country.”

The winner must take more than 50% of the votes cast and with such a large number of candidates, it is likely the race will go to a second round, scheduled for December 19.

Madagascar Elections
Presidential hopeful Andry Rajoelina casts his vote (Kabir Dhanji/AP)

The three former presidents who are the leading candidates have all voted.

Former President Marc Ravalomanana, who ruled between 2002 and 2009, voted in his Faravohitra neighbourhood, in the centre of the capital, Antananarivo.

Andry Rajoelina, who was president during the transitional period of 2009 to 2013, voted in the capital’s Ambatobe district.

And former president Hery Rajaonarimampianina, who led the country from 2013 to 2018, also voted in Antananarivo.

Madagascar Elections
Voters inside a polling station (Kabir Dhanji/AP)

According to Madagascar’s laws, Mr Rajaonarimampianina resigned in order to campaign, leaving the country to be run by the president of the senate.

Voting took place normally in the centre of Toamasina, a large port city on the east coast of the island.

With an estimated 76% of its 25 million people in extreme poverty, Madagascar is one of the world’s poorest countries, according to the World Bank.

There are 9.9 million registered voters who will go to the polling stations.

Preliminary results are expected by November 14 and officials have until November 28 to declare the final outcome.