France adopts bill ratifying the end of CFA franc
The French Council of Ministers adopted Wednesday the bill ratifying the end of the CFA franc. This text formally validates the transformation of the West African currency, which will change its name to eco.
It is a new step after the announcement made on December 21 by Presidents Emmanuel Macron of France and Alassane Ouattara of Côte d’Ivoire.
The reform concerns eight member countries of the West African Monetary Union: Benin, Burkina Faso, Côte d’Ivoire, Guinea-Bissau, Mali, Niger, Senegal and Togo. The adoption of the new currency had been in the pipeline for at least three years and was concluded after lengthy negotiations between France and the countries concerned in the last half of 2019.
Beside the change of the name of the currency, the real in-depth change is the breaking of the “technical” links between the countries concerned and the Treasury and the Bank of France. France will no longer co-manage the West African currency with the States concerned.
Another change is that the Central Bank of West African States will no longer have to deposit half of its foreign exchange reserves with the Bank of France.
This obligation was perceived as a humiliating dependence on France by all those who worked for this reform. France will also leave all WAEMU decision-making and management bodies. But Paris will continue to offer guarantees in the event of a monetary crisis.
It will take even longer for the former franc zone to join with the other countries of ECOWAS to build a single currency. In the ECOWAS zone, some people, particularly Nigeria, do not look favorably on this reform.