DrBanneker
Space is the Place

What is the CFA franc zone?
The CFA franc zone consists of 14 countries in sub-Saharan Africa, each affiliated with one of two monetary unions. Benin, Burkina Faso, Côte D’Ivoire, Guinea-Bissau, Mali, Niger, Senegal, and Togo comprise the West African Economic and Monetary Union, or WAEMU, founded in 1994 to build on the foundation of the West African Monetary Union, founded in 1973. The remaining six countries — Cameroon, Central African Republic, Chad, Republic of Congo, Equatorial Guinea, and Gabon — comprise the Central African Economic and Monetary Union, or CAEMC.
These two unions maintain the same currency, the CFA franc, which stands for Communauté Financière Africaine (African Financial Community) within WAEMU and Coopération Financière en Afrique Centrale (Financial Cooperation in Central Africa) within CAEMC. WAEMU and CAEMC account for 14 percent of Africa’s population and 12 percent of its GDP.
All of these countries except Guinea-Bissau and Equatorial Guinea were colonies of France and maintain French as an official language. Guinea-Bissau was ruled by Portugal, and today its official language is Portuguese, while Equatorial Guinea was ruled by Spain, and today both Spanish and French are its official languages.
Having an independent currency and monetary policy is a significant part of real sovereignty and independence. But most of the former French colonies in Africa don't. They have the CFA Franc, which while benchmarked to first the Franc and then the Euro, may have provided some currency stability and full convertibility with the Franc (and now Euro), it has quite a few zingers:
- Members' foreign-exchange reserves are pooled; each central bank keeps 65% of its foreign reserves with the French Treasury.
- To ensure monetary discipline, foreign reserves must equal at least 20% of the central banks' short-term deposits.
I know most of these countries trade with France and each other so there is some benefit but is pegging the the Franc or Euro in their best interest? It effectively ties them to Europe when they could be pegging to the USD, Chinese Yuan, or creating a pan-African currency. The latter is reportedly why Ghadaffi was overthrown and killed.
Any thoughts on how to get out of this? Having private citizens accumulate gold and silver that the central banks could eventually swap for a new precious metal backed currency is the only thing I can think of.