
The Nigerian President, Muhammadu Buhari, has listed the inherent danger in the planned currency integration in the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) by the year 2020.
Buhari, in a speech read on his behalf by the Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Godwin Emefiele, today, Tuesday, at the 5th meeting of the Presidential Task Force on ECOWAS Currency Programme in Accra, Ghana, said that Heads of Government had not properly articulated and analyzed a comprehensive picture of the state of preparedness of individual countries for monetary integration by 2020.
The President said that the non-preparedness of some member countries, the credibility of the union if anchored on watered down criteria, and the continuing disparities between macro-economic conditions in ECOWAS countries, continued to be major issues of concern that members must examine in order to make progress.
President Buhari observed that ECOWAS Heads of Government have not been adequately briefed on the full implications of forcing through the integration by 2020, particularly where some countries were not individually ready domestically.
He said that there have been outstanding issues in the roadmap to an integrated currency union, and that the macro-economic fundamentals of many countries in ECOWAS are diverse and uncertain.
According to the Nigerian leader, the inflation targeting regime recommended as framework is not feasible as it is based on adoption of a flexible exchange rate regime, adding that real convergence is nowhere near achievable despite efforts that have been made so far.
President Buhari therefore called for a push towards ratification and domestication of legal instruments and related protocols, and the harmonization of all fiscal, trade and monetary policies and statistical systems, with a view to limiting the extent of current policy divergences.
He also advised that the West African Economic and Monetary Union (UEMOA) countries to make a presentation on a clear roadmap towards delinking from the French Treasury.
The President called for a review of the fast-track approach to monetary integration and the harmonization of plans by ECOWAS members with that of the African Union Programme of monetary convergence that had recommended a convergence deadline of 2034 for the for the establishment of Regional Central Banks in all sub-regions of the continent.
He used the occasion of the meeting to call for the establishment of an Ombudsman with powers to invoke sanctions when member countries are in breach of agreed standards, protocols and convergence criteria.
The Nigerian President also called for the transformation of the West African Monetary Institute (WAMI) into a West African Monetary Zone Commission, equivalent to the UEMOA Commission, stressing that his proposal of merging WAMI and WAMA, by the ECOWAS Commission into the ECOWAS Monetary Institute would be very critical in achieving monetary union in the West African sub-region.