5 October 2012
Interview during the France 24 TV News– 5th October 2012 – 09:15 P.M.
This Friday, 5 October 2012, France and 15 African countries, members of Franc zone (Central Africa region in 1972, West Africa region in 1973 with Comoros) are celebrating the 40th anniversary of their monetary cooperation with France. Did anything change? For whom?
1. The Creation of the CFA Franc Area: 67th or 159th birthday
This Friday, 5 October 2012, France and 15 African countries, members of Franc zone (Central Africa region in 1972, West Africa region in 1973 with Comoros) are celebrating the 40th anniversary of their monetary cooperation with France. In fact, the real CFA Franc birthday was the 26th of December 1945, 67 years ago. It was called Franc of the French colonies of Africa: at that time for 1 FCFA, you got 1.70 Metropolitan Franc (MF) and in 1948, 1 FCFA for 2 MF.
In 1948, the CFA franc versus the French franc was unilaterally reevaluated in 1948: 1 FCFA for 2 Metropolitan Franc. Later on it was the value of the French Franc which was changed (1 New Franc = 0.02 FCFA). Between 12 January 1994 and 31 December 1998, the FCFA experienced an unilaterally and drastic devaluation: 1 CFA franc = 0.01 FRF. As of 1 January 1999, the French Franc was replaced by the Euro. 1 Euro = 655.957 CFA francs as a fix rate.
The main purpose of the creation of the FCFA was to reestablish the French monetary authority on French colonies after the Second World War. This overall strategy has not really changed in 2012.
As of the independence of the African francophone countries in the 1960s, the Franc CFA stands for Franc of the African Financial Community. But between 1945 and 1958, it was called Franc of the French colonies of Africa and between 1958 and the 1960s, the Franc of the French Community of Africa. It is the currency of monetary zone called Franc zone…
In fact, if African economists could write the history of the FCFA, 1853 should be the birthday of the first bank of the Franc Zone 159 years ago with the creation of the Bank of Senegal, Dakar, a Bank with both commercial and central bank privileges.
The mechanisms of monetary cooperation between France and the African members of the Franc Zone are based on four fundamental principles:
- Guarantee the convertibility;
- The fixed parity (fixed exchange rate);
- Free transferability of the FCFA; and
- The Centralization in France of foreign exchange reserves (not by the French Central Bank, but by the French Treasury).
The Franc zone is currently estimated around 3% of the money supply (broad money) in the Euro area.
2. Stability Yes, but for whom ?
The Monetary and Political stability promoted as a success after the African independence of the 1960s, is equivalent to the transfer of sovereignty of the Francophone area to the French authorities. The predominance of the French authorities in the Franc Zone Board has not really favored monetary governance, strategic development, access to credit for the business community, clear deindustrialization process. In the contrary it has favored difficult monetary convergence of the various economies, and a blockade to the African continental and regional common currency… In fact, it has predominantly privileged the Stability of non-democratic regimes with fake political alternancy or no political alternancy at all.
The convertibility between West and Central CFA zone could be misleading: same currency, same parity and same monetary value against FRF and Euro. But high additional costs (commission, non official exchange rate up to 30 % reduction)… West African CFA coins and banknotes are theoretically not accepted in countries using Central African CFA francs, and vice versa. The bad part of the story is that the convertibility is only through the French Treasury. In fact, it is not accepted in the major part of the Euro Zone and definitively not in the USA except through the Euro.
3. Transfer of monetary sovereignty still continues: Post-colonial win-win approaches ?
As the Francophone African countries must transfer on the accounts of the French Treasury 50% (half) of their foreign exchange reserves, the future of the CFA Franc seems bleak. There is not clear proactive move forward from the concerned African Ministers of Finance and Central Bank Governors. The convergence criteria among West/Central African countries are still on paper. The African monetary Fund, the African Central Bank and the African Common Currency (regional or continental) are still postponed… after 2015, or later, and 2021 was often mentioned… An effective democracy in the Francophone economies could speed the matter.
According to the International Monetary Fund statistics and benchmarking the 2004-08 period with 2012, Sub-Saharan Africa is doing better than the CFA Franc Zone (see Table 1 annexed).
Table 1: Benchmarking CFA Franc Zone and selected African regions Per Capita GDP growth and Fiscal Balance |
||||
|
CFA Franc Zone |
WAEMU |
CEMAC |
SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA |
Real per Capita GDP Growth 2004-2008 |
2 |
0.7 % |
3.3 % |
4.2 % |
Real Per Capita GDP Growth 2012 |
2.8 % |
3.5 % |
2.1 % |
3.2 % |
Fiscal Balance2004-2008 |
5.1 % |
-0.3 % |
10.3 % |
2.3 % |
Fiscal 2012 |
-0.4 % |
-4 % |
2.6 % |
-0.7 |
Source: IMF (2012). REO. SSA April 2012. |
The question raised is simple: Could the President François Holland change the present status quo of the transfer of the African monetary sovereignty to legitimate and democratically elected African representatives before the end of its Presidential mandate in 4 years and 7 months? Or is he going to perpetuate the post-colonial win-win approaches 1?
Dr Yves Ekoué AMAÏZO, Director Afrocentricity Think Tank,
International independent Consultant and Author of Naissance d’une banque de la zone franc: 1848-1901. Priorité aux propriétaires d’esclaves (Birth of a bank of the Franc Zone : 1848-1901. Priority to slave owners), éditions l’Harmattan, Paris, 2001 and Crise financière mondiale. Des réponses alternatives de l’Afrique (Global financial crisis. Alternative responses of Africa), éditions Menaibuc, Paris, 2010.
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Notes:
- See the interview with Africa number 1 on Monday 8 October 2012, 1:30 to 2:00 P. M. Le Journal des Auditeurs, www.africa1.com and www.afrocentricity.info ↩