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Opinion

Neo-Colonial Currency Enables French Exploitation

SYDNEY and KUALA LUMPUR, Aug 2 2022 (IPS) - Colonial-style currency board arrangements have enabled continuing imperialist exploitation decades after the end of formal colonial rule. Such neo-colonial monetary systems persist despite modest reforms.

In 2019, Italian Deputy Prime Minister Luigi Di Maio accused France of using currency arrangements to “exploit” its former African colonies, “impoverishing Africa” and causing refugees to “leave and then die in the sea or arrive on our coasts”.

Anis Chowdhury

Neo-colonial CFA
As France ratified the Bretton Woods Agreement (BWA) on 26 December 1945, it established the Colonies Françaises d’Afrique (CFA) franc zone, enabling France to update pre-war colonial monetary arrangements.

The ostensible intent of the ‘Franc of the French Colonies of Africa’ (FCFA) was to cushion its colonies from the drastic French franc (FF) devaluation required to peg its value to the US dollar, as agreed at Bretton Woods.

Then French finance minister René Pleven claimed, “In a show of her generosity and selflessness, metropolitan France, wishing not to impose on her faraway daughters the consequences of her own poverty, is setting different exchange rates for their currency”.

In December 1958, the CFA franc became the ‘Franc of the Communauté Financière Africaine’ (still FCFA). In 1960, President Charles de Gaulle made CFA membership a pre-condition for French decolonization in West and Central Africa.

The CFA recently involved 14 mainly Francophone sub-Saharan African countries belonging to two currency unions, both using the CFA franc (FCFA): the West African Economic and Monetary Union (UEMOA) and the Economic and Monetary Community of Central Africa (CEMAC).

UEMOA comprises Benin, Burkina Faso, Côte d’Ivoire, Guinea-Bissau, Mali, Niger, Senegal and Togo, while CEMAC includes Cameroon, the Central African Republic, Republic of Congo, Gabon, Equatorial Guinea and Chad.

Jomo Kwame Sundaram

France’s ‘incontestable advantages’
De Gaulle’s finance minister, and later President, Valéry Giscard d’Estaing correctly complained about the US dollar’s “exorbitant privilege”. But he seemed blissfully ignorant of the French Socio-Economic Council’s 1970 report on the CFA’s “incontestable advantages for France”.

First, France could pay for imports from CFA countries with its own currency, saving foreign exchange for other international obligations. This became especially advantageous when the FF was weak and unstable.

Second, the French Treasury often paid negative real interest rates for CFA reserves. Thus, CFA countries have been paying it to hold their foreign reserves! Investment income is then deployed as French aid to CFA countries in the form of loans to be repaid with interest!

But CFA countries themselves cannot use their own reserves as collateral to secure credit as these are held by the French Treasury. Thus, during the global financial crisis, they had to borrow, mainly from France, at commercial rates.

Third, by supplying FCFA at the fixed rate, seigniorage – the difference between the cost of issuing currency and its face value – has effectively accrued to France and, more recently, the European Central Bank.

For every euro so deposited, the FCFA equivalent is issued and made available to the depositing country. When France joined the euro in 1999, one euro fetched 6.55957 FFs, or 655.957 FCFA.

CFA economies have thus effectively ceded monetary sovereignty to the French Treasury. Unsurprisingly, France’s monetary control has served its own, rather than CFA members’ economic interests.

Fourth, French companies operating in the CFA have been able to freely repatriate funds without incurring any foreign exchange risk. Worse, when CFA countries have faced foreign exchange problems, France has made things worse!

CFA elites, French patrons
The CFA not only benefits France, but also elites in CFA countries. Their appetite for faux French lifestyles explains their preference for overvalued exchange rates.

The CFA also facilitates financial outflows, no matter how illicitly acquired, as long as they do not challenge the neo-colonial status quo. For decades, all manner of French governments have consistently backed these elites, typically supporting despotic rule.

When its interests in Africa have been threatened, France has unilaterally deployed combat troops and superior armaments, always insisting on its ‘legitimate’ right to do so.

France is alleged to be behind military coups and even assassinations of prominent personalities critical of its interests, policies and stratagems. On 13 January 1963, only two days after issuing its own currency, Togo President Sylvanus Olympio was killed in a coup.

In 1968, six years after withdrawing Mali from the CFA, its independence leader and first President, Modibo Keita was ousted in a coup after trying to develop its economy along more independent and progressive lines.

Plus ça change, plus c’est la même chose
When the CFA was first created in 1945, the colonies deposited 100% of their foreign exchange reserves in a special French Treasury ‘operating account’. This requirement was reduced to 65% from 1973 to 2005, and then to 50%, plus an additional 20% for daily foreign currency transactions or “financial liabilities”.

Thus, CFA states are still deprived of most of their foreign exchange earnings, retaining only 30%! Meanwhile, Banque de France holds 90% of CFA gold reserves, making it the world’s fourth largest holder of gold reserves.

The FCFA arrangement was supposed to end for UEMOA countries from 20 May 2020. While only six former French colonies in Central Africa formally remain in the CFA, the reform is less than meets the eye.

France remains UEMOA’s ‘financial guarantor’, appointing an ‘independent’ member to its central bank board. Meanwhile, the proposed West African ‘eco’ currency is still not yet in circulation, while the transfer of euro reserves from the French Treasury to the West African Central Bank has yet to happen.

After its creation, FCFA parity was set at 50 to one FF. On 12 January 1994, the FCFA was devalued by half, as demanded by the International Monetary Fund, with support from France. This followed problems due to commodity price slumps.

The devaluation shocked CFA economies as the FCFA’s value fell by half overnight! This pushed up prices of imported goods, including food, while increasing the FF’s purchasing power.

Meanwhile, eight FF devaluations between 1948 and 1986 against the US dollar and gold have also meant great losses to the value of CFA reserves. CFA countries have ostensibly benefitted from anchoring the FCFA to a supposedly stable FF. But in fact, the FF experienced a 70% cumulative devaluation over this period!

Less inflation, no development
CFA advocates also claim that pegging the West and Central African FCFA to the FF, and later the euro, has ensured less inflation than in other African countries. But CFA members “traded decreased inflation for fiscal restraint and limited macroeconomic options”.

The cost of lower inflation “has been slower per capita growth and diminished poverty reduction”. They have had lower growth, on average, than in non-CFA countries. Eleven of the 14 CFA member states are least developed countries at the bottom of UNDP’s Human Development Index.

The CFA has also limited credit for economic growth and industrialization. This has been seen in lower credit-GDP ratios of between 10% to 25% in CFA countries, against over 60% in other Sub-Saharan African countries. These lower ratios also reflect weak financial and banking sectors, unable to be effectively developmental.

The CFA has also not enhanced trade among members. After six decades, trade among CEMAC and UEMOA members averaged 4.7% and 12% of total trade respectively – much less than, say, ASEAN’s 23%. Low intra-CFA trade and pegged exchange rates have ensured persistent balance of payments imbalances.

The currency arrangement also encourages capital outflows. Aggregate net capital flight out of CFA countries during 1970-2010 averaged $83.5 billion, 117% of combined GDP! Unregulated capital transfers between CFA countries and France have enabled much more capital flight than elsewhere during 1970-2015.

No sovereignty, no development
Socialist Party President François Mitterrand was no less neo-colonial. He warned that without control of Africa, France would become irrelevant in the 21st century.

In January 2001, French President Jacques Chirac reputedly admitted, “While speaking of Africa, we must check our memory. We started draining the continent four and a half centuries ago with the slave trade. Next, we discovered their raw materials and seized them.

“Having deprived Africans of their wealth, we sent in our elites who destroyed their culture. Now, we are depriving them of their brains thanks to scholarships … [as] the most intelligent students do not go back to their countries … In the end, noticing that Africa is not in a good state … we are giving lectures”.

In 2008, Chirac reportedly noted, “We have to be honest and acknowledge that a big part of the money in our banks comes precisely from the exploitation of the African continent. Without Africa, France will slide down [to] the rank of a Third World power.”

Claiming to be from a different generation, President Emmanuel Macron promised to end such neo-colonial arrangements. Yet, at the 2017 G20 Summit, he patronizingly declared Africa’s problem “civilizational”.

Such neo-colonial condescension refuses to acknowledge France’s continued exploitation of its West and Central African ex-colonies. Clearly, CFA currency arrangements have limited their economic policy space and progress.

Colonial style exploitation has thus continued in Africa long after decolonization. Unsurprisingly, Chad President Idriss Deby declared, “we must have the courage to say there is a cord preventing development in Africa that must be severed”.

IPS UN Bureau

 


  
 
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