East African Currency Still Viable?

Last year at the launch of the East African Community Common Market, we wrote on the impending currency the trading bloc hoped to introduce in 2012. However with the debt crisis afflicting the Eurozone at present, how plausible would a single currency be in the EAC? I give 3 reasons why it maybe should be kept on the theortical counter for the foreeable future.

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1. The Kenyan Shilling has been among the worst performing currencies in the world this year, depreciating constantly with the US $. This has been because of inflationary pressures in the country, forcing the monetary authorities to purchase dollars and increase interest rates to tame overheating. In a single currency system, Kenya would not have the possibilities to address domestic concerns, and as they are the biggest economy in the bloc,they could wield unfair influence on the other states, creating problems there.

 

2. Elections have an effect in African economic performance. Yoweri Museveni won his elections in February this year, but post his reinstatement, inflationary pressures and demonstrations have forced him to forego prudent macro-economic discipline, in a single currency system, a replication of this would plunge the whole bloc into a position similar to Portugal in the Euro. Kenya goes to the polls in August 2012, and despite the new constitution, the PNU may also begin to purchase patronage to secure victory, hence draining the national coffers.

 

3. Impending talks from South Sudan to join the bloc mean they too would want to eventually have access to joining the currency, especially as they try move from the orbit of the North. As an oil producing state, and a country building from scratch,the inflationary pressures they will create will not just affect a unitary currency, but the common market itself.

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6 Foreign Nationals Pardoned in Somalia Piracy Trial

On June 18, 6 foreign nationals, 3 Britons, 1 American, and 2 Kenyans, were given jail terms up to 15 years for illegally bringing in US$3m to pay a ransom for an unspecified ship in Somalia. 8 days later, all 6 were granted a presidential pardon, with the ransom money confiscated and an order to pay US$100 000 to have their planes released.

 

This event comes in the same week as a new Prime Minister was named, after Abudallahi Mohamed was forced to step down, after a political deadlock with incumbent president, Sahrif Sheikh Ahmed.

 

There are 3 things that can be deduced from this, first, instability and volatility in the executive means that there is always scope for influence to be put on the Somali authorities.

 

Second, there is now a public acknowledgement that ransoms occur in Somalia, previously the government banned them, this is tacit knowledge that ransoms are paid to pirates.

 

Third, the industry of piracy will be buoyed, pirates now know they could get ransoms paid out, and this also means forces of instability such as al-Shabab will continue their fight with the Africa Union forces, as there are financial links between pirates and the rebel group. With average ransoms of US$4 million now, the market will only increase for this activity.

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Development Afrique returns for 2011.

Happy New Year to all readers, and those interested in African Development. I have been unable to post for nearly two months, however I have done lots of research and have another year of understanding the happenings on the dynamic continent.

The plan is that I will post three times a week, Monday-Wednesday-Friday for 2011. I hope you enjoy the output I will have this year, and remember comments are always welcome.

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The Economist: The World In 2011. Africa Focus.

Essential reading for any economist, is the seminal The Economist: The World In series. The 2011 edition has just been released, and just like Development Afrique  did last year covering the 2010 edition, so we shall look at what was said in the 2010 publication, if it came to pass or not, and what The Economist predicts for 2011.

The World In 2010: Africa Retrospectively.

” The World Cup will be a chance to showcase Africa, but can Africa handle the pressure? Despite high levels of violent crime, unhappy construction workers and a shaky economy, South Africa will prove the sceptics wrong…..for the first time, other Africans will see that South Africa is in many ways more closer to Australia or Argentina than to their ramshackle countries.” Apart from on the pitch, the FIFA 2010 World Cup was a success in organization and South Africa joining the list of countries capable of hosting the world. Africa was united from Cape to Cairo with the progress of Ghana to the Quarter Finals, and 1 penalty kick away from the Semi Finals.

“Somalia would be little noticed were it not for its fastest growing industry: piracy.” Somalia continues to be the country that refuses to integrate itself to the continent, let alone the world. Piracy is still a vibrant business, 44% of global piracy attacks on the seas are occurring off the coast of Somalia. Al-Shabab still have a strong influence on the country, and with that still in place, piracy will continue.

“Unlike other countries that have had to implement stimulus packages, South Africa’s public investment programme predates the economic crisis. Money is not being spent on bailing out banks or badly run private enterprises, but on building roads and schools.” How things can change. The World Cup ran smoothly, but post the football festival, a crippling national strike over wages, and the continued strengthening of the Rand that has seen a revision of the role of the Reserve Bank of South Africa. These issues need to be addressed in the short to medium term before they become a burden in the long term.

The World In 2011: Africa

Sub-Saharan Africa will be one of the fastest-growing regions of the world in 2011, thanks to surging demand both from abroad and at home. As a result, investors will find it increasingly difficult to ignore the area.” The developed world is currently dragging itself from the ashes of the 2007 Financial Crisis and subsequent recession, with austerity measures fuelling quantitative easing to drive up demand and growth. Sub-Saharan Africa on the other hand has increasing Urbanisation rates, increasing personal incomes, and insatiable demand for raw materials from the rest of the World. Africa will increasingly be a destination for investment, especially with low interest rates in the developed worlds, Africa can offer substantially higher returns on investments.

“The emergence of South Sudan as the worlds newest country will not spark a new war. Instead, the conflict will be within South Sudan. This is a place of tribes, jealous of their cultures and lands. The largest think they have a natural claim on the oil revenue that will come with independence. Where oil is the only resource beyond the subsistence economy, that is a recipe for disaster.” All indications point to it not being a matter of if, but when South Sudan elects to secede from Khartoum, that the real struggle will occur. As yet, voting formalities haven’t been ironed out as who will be eligible to vote and is not, and the big question, will the Omar al-Bashir government recognise the outcome? Testing times ahead for South Sudan, independence is not always the easiest of things to manage.

Among other features, The World In 2011 predicts the economic fortunes and main economic/political events of Algeria, Angola, Cameroon, Egypt, Ethiopia, Kenya, Libya, Morocco, Nigeria, South Africa, Tanzania and Zimbabwe.

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