The
currency which is called ECO was adopted by the Authority of ECOWAS Heads of
State and Government on Saturday in Nigeria’s capital Abuja.
The West African leaders endorsed the currency at their 55th
Ordinary Session and approved a road map towards the currency’s issuance in
January 2020.
The criteria for adoption includes member countries having a
budget deficit of not more than 3%; average annual inflation of less than 10%
with a long-term goal of not more than 5% by 2019
Member countries were also expected to have gross reserves that can finance at
least three months of imports.
The other convergence criteria that have been adopted by ECOWAS
are public debt or Gross Domestic Product of not more than 70%.
There is also the issue of central banks financing budget
deficit not more than 10% of previous year’s tax revenue, and nominal exchange
rate variation of plus or minus 10%.
A communiqué by Nigeria’s Permanent Secretary, Ministry of
Foreign Affairs, Mustapha Suleiman said that the regional leaders instructed
the ECOWAS Commission to work in collaboration with West African Monetary
Agency.
The commission is also expected to work with West African
Monetary Institute and all central banks to settle on a symbol for the single
currency.
Meanwhile, the ECOWAS Chairman President Issoufou Mahamadou said
that the revised roadmap does not affect the date for the issuance of the
single currency in January 2020.
He said “We have not changed that but we will continue with
assessment between now and then.
“We are of the view that countries that are ready will launch
the single currency and countries that are not yet ready will join the
programme as they comply with all six convergence criteria,” he added.
ECOWAS was set up in 1975 and has a combined population of 385
million.
It comprises Benin, Burkina Faso, Cape Verde, Gambia, Ghana,
Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Ivory Coast, Liberia, Mali, Niger, Nigeria, Senegal,
Sierra Leone and Togo.
Eight of these countries use one currency called the CFA franc.
Those are Benin, Burkina Faso, Guinea-Bissau, Ivory Coast, Mali, Niger,
Senegal, and Togo.
The decision to adopt one currency is similar to that of the
European Union to adopt a single currency called Euro.
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