Opentopia Directory Encyclopedia Tools

CFA franc

Encyclopedia : C : CF : CFA : CFA franc


The countries using the CFA franc
The countries using the CFA franc

1000 franc banknote
Enlarge
1000 franc banknote

The CFA franc (in French: franc CFA, or just franc in everyday conversation if the context is clear) is a currency used in 12 formerly French-ruled African countries, as well as in Guinea-Bissau (former Portuguese colony) and in Equatorial Guinea (former Spanish colony). The ISO currency code for the Central African CFA is XAF and for the West African CFA is XOF.

It has a fixed rate compared to the euro: 100 CFA francs = 1 former French franc = 0.152449 euro, or 1 euro = 655.957 CFA francs.

Even though Central African CFA Francs and West African CFA Francs have the same monetary value against other currencies, Western coins and banknotes are not accepted in countries using Central African CFA Francs, and vice versa.

Name

CFA stood for Colonies françaises d'Afrique ("French colonies of Africa") between 1945 and 1958, and then for Communauté française d'Afrique ("French community of Africa") between 1958 (establishment of the French Fifth Republic) and the independence of these African countries at the beginning of the 1960s. Since the time of their independence, CFA can have two meanings (see Institutions below).

History

Creation

The CFA franc was created on December 26, 1945, along with the CFP franc. The reason for the creation of these francs was the weakness of the French franc immediately after the Second World War. When France ratified the Bretton Woods Agreement in December 1945, the French franc was devalued in order to set a fixed exchange rate with the US dollar. New currencies were created in the French colonies to spare them the strong devaluation of December 1945. René Pleven, the French minister of finance, was quoted saying: "In a show of her generosity and selflessness, metropolitan France, wishing not to impose on her far-away daughters the consequences of her own poverty, is setting different exchange rates for their currency."

Exchange rate

The CFA franc was created with a fixed exchange rate vs. the French franc. The exchange rate vs. the French franc was changed only twice: in 1948 and in 1994.

Exchange rate:

The 1960 and 1999 events are merely changes in the currency in use in France: the relative value of the CFA franc vs. the French franc / euro changed only in 1948 and 1994.

The value of the CFA franc has been widely criticized as being too high, which many economists believe favors the urban elite of the African countries which can buy manufactured goods cheaply at the expense of the farmers who cannot easily export agricultural products. The devaluation of 1994 was an attempt to reduce the value of the CFA franc.

Countries and other territories

European Monetary Union

In 1998 in anticipation of Economic and Monetary Union of the European Union, the Council of the European Union addressed the monetary agreements France has with the CFA Zone and Comoros and ruled that:

Institutions

Strictly speaking, there actually exist two different currencies called CFA franc: the West African CFA franc (ISO 4217 currency code XOF), and the Central Africa CFA franc (ISO 4217 currency code XAF). They are distinguished in French by the meaning of the abbreviation CFA. These two CFA francs have the same exchange rate with the euro (1 euro = 655.957 XOF = 655.957 XAF), and they are both guaranteed by the French treasury (Trésor public), but the West African CFA franc cannot be used in Central African countries, and the Central Africa CFA franc cannot be used in West African countries.

West African

The West African CFA franc (XOF) is just known in French as the Franc CFA, where CFA stands for Communauté financière d'Afrique ("Financial Community of Africa"). It is issued by the BCEAO (Banque Centrale des États de l'Afrique de l'Ouest, i.e. "Central Bank of the West African States"), located in Dakar, Sénégal, for the 8 countries of the UEMOA (Union Économique et Monétaire Ouest Africaine, i.e. "West African Economic and Monetary Union"): These 8 countries have a total population of 75.5 million inhabitants (2003) and a combined GDP of 36.96 billion USD in 2003. This is about the same population and GDP as Vietnam.

In 2004, the 1994 series of West African banknotes were switched for a new series. These new notes have updated security features, and are more modern in design. The switch has also been welcomed by some because of the perception that the old bills were dirty and disease-ridden ([1]). Despite this, there are fears that those living in rural regions will not hear of the changeover, and as a result, will lose their savings when the older series notes are demonetarized. As well, the color of the 5,000 CFA bill was changed from blueish to green, which could leave open the possiblility of the illiterate being shortchanged when switching from the old to the new series.

The anglophone states of Gambia, Ghana, Nigeria, and Sierra Leone, and the francophone state of Guinea, have formed the West African Monetary Zone (WAMZ) and will introduce a common currency, the ECO, on 1 December 2009. Liberia is also set to join this monetary zone, and the ultimate goal is to unite the UEMOA and the WAMZ to form a single West African monetary zone.

Mauritania, a former French colony in West Africa, uses the Mauritanian ouguiya and not the CFA franc.

Central African

The Central Africa CFA franc (XAF) is just known in French as the Franc CFA, where CFA stands for Coopération financière en Afrique centrale ("Financial Cooperation in Central Africa"). It is issued by the BEAC (Banque des États de l'Afrique Centrale, i.e. "Bank of the Central African States"), located in Yaounde, Cameroon, for the 6 countries of the CEMAC (Communauté Économique et Monétaire de l'Afrique Centrale, i.e. "Economic and Monetary Community of Central Africa"): These 6 countries have a total population of 34.15 million inhabitants (2003) and a combined GDP of 28.3 billion USD in 2003. This is about the same population as Tanzania, and the same GDP as Kazakhstan.

Equatorial Guinea, the only former Spanish colony in the zone, adopted the CFA in 1984.

Denominations

Coins in circulation Banknotes in circulation

Current XAF/XOF exchange rates

[AUD] | [CAD] | [EUR] | [GBP] | [INR] | [NZD] | [USD]

See also

External links

West African

Central African

Other


Currencies of Africa
North

Algerian dinar > Euro (Plaza de soberanía) | Egyptian pound | Libyan dinar | Mauritanian ouguiya | Moroccan dirham | Sudanese dinar | Tunisian dinar
Central

Angolan kwanza > Burundian franc | Central African CFA franc (Cameroon, Central African Republic, Chad, Republic of the Congo, Equatorial Guinea, and Gabon) | Congolese franc | Rwandan franc
West

Cape Verdean escudo > Euro (Azores, Canary Islands, Madeira) | Gambian dalasi | Ghanaian cedi | Guinean franc | Liberian dollar | Nigerian naira | São Tomé and Príncipe dobra | Sierra Leonean leone | West African CFA franc (Benin, Burkina Faso, Côte d'Ivoire, Guinea-Bissau, Mali, Niger, Senegal, and Togo)
East

Comorian franc > Djiboutian franc | Eritrean nakfa | Ethiopian birr | Kenyan shilling | Seychelles rupee | Somali shilling | Somaliland shilling | Tanzanian shilling | Ugandan shilling
South

Botswana pula > Euro (Mayotte, Réunion) | Lesotho loti | Malawian kwacha | Malagasy ariary | Mauritian rupee | Mozambican metical | Namibian dollar | Norwegian krone (Bouvet Island de jure) | Saint Helena pound | South African rand | Swazi lilangeni | Zambian kwacha | Zimbabwean dollar
This box: [ view] • [ talk] • [ edit]

 


From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.

Search Titles
0123456789
ABCDEFGHIJ
KLMNOPQRST
UVWXYZ?

E-mail this article to:

Personal Message: