Political sketch
Formerly part of French West Africa, later part of the Federation of Mali, and still later part of Senegambia. Independent from France on 4 April 1960.
Senegal was part of several African empires before falling under French influence. In the mid 1400s, Portuguese navigators established trading stations at the mouth of the Senegal river, on the island of Gorée (near present-day Dakar), at Rufisque, and along the coast to the south. The Dutch elbowed them aside in the 1600s and in later in the century the French did likewise to the Dutch. A French trading station at the mouth of the Senegal River became the town of Saint-Louis, and in 1677 France took over Gorée from the Dutch. After British occupation in 1693, 1758-1763, 1779-1783, and 1800-1817, Saint-Louis and Gorée were returned to France. Gum was the main export, but it was not particularly lucrative. In 1848 the ailing colonial economy was further disrupted when France outlawed slavery in its colonies. From 1854 to 1865 France spread its power over what is now Senegal. Peanuts became an important export crop. In 1895 Senegal became the seat of French West Africa, and in 1902 its capital was moved to Dakar from Saint-Louis.
Inhabitants of Saint-Louis, Gorée, Dakar, and Rufisque were recognized by the French Third Republic as French citizens, regardless of race. In 1914 the African electors succeeded in sending one of their own the National Assembly in Paris as their deputy. These privileges were lost between 1940 and 1942, when French West Africa passed under control of the wartime Vichy government, but they were restored under France's Fourth Republic after the Second World War. During the war, French West Africa initially adhered to the French government of Vichy, which was something between neutral and allied with Germany, but on 23 November 1943, about two weeks after the Allied invasion of French Morocco and Algeria, it switched allegiance to the Free French government and joined the Allies.
In 1958 the Senegalese electorate first accepted membership as an autonomous republic in the French Community. On 14 January 1959 Senegal united with Mali to form the Federation of Mali. (Dahomey [now Benin] and Upper Volta [now Burkina Faso] also participated in the negotiations for the federation but decided not to joint it.) Owing to political differences, Senegal seceded, becoming independent on 4 April 1960, in the great wave of French African colonies that year. Senegal's first president, Léopold Senghor, allowed opposition parties to form in 1976 and stepped down as president in January 1981 in favor of his chosen successor Abdou Diouf. The elections of 1983 and 1988 were marred by charges of fraud. In 1988 a state of emergency was declared. In 1981, when Senegalese troops entered The Gambia to defeat a coup, a Senegambian confederation had been proclaimed, but it was dissolved in 1989. During 1989 Senegal had border disputes with Guinea-Bissau and Mauritania. Diouf lost the election of 2000, marking Senegal's first transfer of power from one party to another. The main exports are fish, peanuts, and petroleum.
Wars since 1500
Tukulor-French Wars, 1854-1864; Senegalese Border War of 1989-1991 (against Mauritania).
Convertibility
The French franc zone:
When the First World War began, France imposed a moratorium of payments on all negotiable instruments starting 1 August 1914. The moratorium was subsequently extended by decrees until 1 March 1915. The central bank, the Bank of France, abandoned the gold standard on 5 August 1914, although no official prohibition on exporting gold existed until by a decree of 3 July 1915, affirmed by a law of 15 November 1915. A decree of 2 April 1918 prohibited capital exports without authorization. A law of 25 June 1928 officially restored the gold standard and repealed exchange controls. When the French franc was an object of currency speculation , a law of 13 August 1936 imposed extensive exchange controls, supplementing some lesser measures that had been implemented in 1935.
France imposed exchange controls on 9 September 1939 by a decree of that date, soon after the Second World War broke out. On 20 May 1940, capital controls within the franc zone were greatly relaxed by a French decree of that date. Exchanges between France and its African colonies were cut off from the time of the Allied invasion of French Morocco and Algeria in November 1942 to about September 1944, by which time the Allies had liberated Paris and the main French port cities. Exchange controls within the franc zone were not removed until 6 June 1946. Afterwards, the CFA franc became convertible both for current- and capital-account transactions within the French franc zone (France, Monaco, And French possessions, including countries using the CFA franc). Outside the French franc zone it became convertible for current-account transactions when France resumed current-account convertibility, but it was not convertible for capital-account transactions. France had multiple exchange rates from 26 January 1948 until 17 October 1948, and a dual exchange rate from 18 October 1948 to 29 September 1949. On 20 September 1949 it devalued the French franc and unified the exchange rate, taking advantage of the lead offered by the United Kingdom, which had devalued the pound sterling on 18 September 1949.
The CFA franc zone:
All independent countries belonging to the CFA franc zone except Mali issued laws or decrees stating that effective 1 July 1967, financial relations with foreign countries were in principle free. Madagascar (then called the Malagasy Republic) issued similar legislation on the same date; Mali waited until 29 March 1968. The CFA franc zone countries were following earlier French legislation (France, Law No. 66-1007, 28 December 1966; Decree No. 67-78, 27 January 1967, effective 31 January 1967). France reintroduced exchange controls on 29 May 1968, during a period of strikes and riots (France, Decree No. 68-481, 29 May 1968). It removed controls on 4 September 1968 (France, Decree No. 68-788, 4 September 1968) but reimposed them on 25 November 1968 (France, Decree No. 68-1021, 24 November 1968) before revoking them on 1 January 1969. The CFA franc zone countries, including Madagascar, all strengthened their exchange controls against countries outside the French franc zone in 1968, following France, and loosened them in January 1969. France introduced a dual exchange rate on 21 August 1971 for itself and its French franc zone territories, which excluded Djibouti (France, Ministry of Economy and Finance, Circulaire du 20 août 1971 relative à l'exécution des transferts à destination de l'étranger, 20 August 1971). The CFA franc zone countries, including Madagascar, followed suit on these dates in 1968: Cameroon and Congo-Brazzaville, 28 August; Burkina Faso (then called Upper Volta) and Côte d'Ivoire (Ivory Coast), 30 August; Gabon and Senegal, 31 August; Mauritania, 1 September; Chad, 3 September; Madagascar and Niger, 4 September; Togo, 7 September; Central African Republic, sometime in September; Benin (then called Dahomey) and Mali, 9 September. All except Madagascar and Mauritania abolished the dual market on 21 March 1974, the same day as France (France, Ministry of Economy and Finance, Circulaire du 20 mars 1974 relative à l'exécution des transferts entre la France et l'étranger sur le marché officiel des changes, 20 March 1974). Madagascar had withdrawn from the French franc zone effective 1 July 1973, and its dual market had ended on that date. Mauritania had introduced a new national currency on 29 June 1973 to replace the CFA franc, and its dual market had ended on that date. The dual exchange rate did not apply to transactions within the French franc zone, so purchases and sales of French francs for CFA francs continued to be made at a single rate, the official rate, which was a pegged rate. Certain purchases and sales of currencies outside the French franc zone had to be made at the so-called financial rate, which was a floating rate.
Reinhart and Rogoff (2002) note a very low premium in the dual market from 9 September 1971-20 March 1974 (by my non-overlapping system of dates; 21 March 1974 by their overlapping system). The premium existed because France established a dual rate, and so as not to create loopholes in the French franc zone, the CFA franc countries established dual exchange rates in imitation of France. In light of the problems the CFA franc had for a decade or more before its devaluation of 12 January 1994, it is surprising that their data show low or often no parallel market premium.
The CFA franc zone central banks suspended convertibility of their currencies into the French franc from 2 August 1993-11 January 1994, resuming on 12 January 1994. When the French franc ended its existence as a separate currency on 1 January 1999, the CFA franc became convertible both for current- and capital-account transactions within the former French franc zone (France and its territories, Monaco, and countries using the CFA franc, including the Comoros), but remained convertible only for current-account transactions with other currencies.
Other
The French government established the CFA franc on 26 December 1945. The CFA franc became the unit of account in French colonies in sub-Saharan Africa and the Americas that had previously used a local franc equal to the French franc. Local francs in North Africa (Algeria, Tunisia, and Morocco) and Djibouti remained in effect fully attached to the French franc. French colonies in the Pacific established a unit of account called the CFP franc, while Indochina, Syria and Lebanon, and Pondicherry (India) already had currencies that were not called francs. The CFA franc enabled the French government to make exchange rate policy in the colonies different from that in France. When making devaluations of the French franc against gold and the US dollar on 26 December 1945 and 17 October 1948, the French government devalued the CFA franc less, implying a revaluation against the French franc. The meaning of "CFA" was initially Colonies Françaises d'Afrique (colonies of France in Africa). In Africa, the meaning changed when the colonies established central banks in preparation for political independence. CFA came to mean Communauté Financière Africaine (African financial community) for the member countries of the Banque Centrale des États de l'Afrique de l'Ouest (BCEAO, opened 4 April 1959). It came to mean Coopération Financière en Afrique Centrale (financial cooperation in Central Africa) for the member countries of the Banque Centrale des États de l'Afrique Équatoriale et du Cameroun (BCEAC, also opened 4 April 1959), which since 22 November 1972 has been called the Banque des États de l'Afrique Centrale (BEAC).
Defaults on or restructurings of debt to the private sector (mainly from Purcell and Kaufman 1993 and Standard & Poor's 2004): 1981-1985 (foreign currency bank debt, oil and interest rate shocks), 1990 (foreign currency bank debt), 1992-1996 (foreign currency bank debt).
Reinhart and Tokatlidis (2000: 33) dating of recent financial liberalization: Domestic (notably interest rates) 1989, external (notably foreign-exchange market and participation by foreign financial institutions) 1996.
Frankel and Rose (1996) list of currency crashes: 1981.
Banking crises (data since 1970s mainly from Caprio and Klingebiel 1999 and Frydl 1999): The Banque Française de l'Afrique, active in Senegal and some other French African colonies, was bailed out in 1930 and liquidated in 1931 by an agreement between the French government and the Banque de l'Afrique Occidentale; a crisis 1983-1991; in 1988, 50% of loans were nonperforming.
References
Primary sources:
--Laws and decrees:
France. Gazette. 1762-present. Gazette de France (1762-1789); Gazette nationale de France (1789-1799); Bulletin des lois (1791-1831; a separate publication); La gazette nationale ou le moniteur universel (1799-1810); Moniteur universel (1811-1848); Moniteur universel: journal officiel de la République française (1848-1852); Journal officiel de l'Empire français (1852-1870); Journal officiel de la République française (1871-1941); Journal officiel de l'État français (Vichy France, 1941-1944); Bulletin officiel des Forces françaises libres (Free France, 1940-1941); Journal officiel de la France libre (Free France, 1941); Journal officiel de la France combattante (Free France, 1941-1943); Journal officiel du Haut commissariat de France en Afrique (Free France, 1943); Journal officiel du Commandement en chef français en Afrique (Free France, 1943); Journal officiel de la République française (Free France, 1943-1944; France, 1944-present). Paris (1762-1940, 1944-present); Vichy (1940-1944); London (Free France, 1941-1943); Algiers (Free France, 1943-1944): Imprimerie des Journaux Officiels (1944?-present). Many issues are in France, Legifrance Web site (see below).
France. Legifrance Web site, <http://www.legifrance.gouv.fr>. Reference site for French treaties, laws, and decrees, including the full text for recent items.
France. Overseas gazette. 1887-1961. Bulletin officiel (1887-1953; new series, 1953-1959); Bulletin officiel de l'administration provisoire des services du Ministère de la France d'Outre-Mer (1959-1961). Issued by Ministère des Colonies (1887-1950); Ministère de la France d'Outre-Mer (1950-1961). Paris: Imprimerie Nationale.
French West Africa. Gazette. 1895-1959. Journal officiel de l'Afrique occidentale française. Saint-Louis, Senegal (1895-1905?); Gorée (1905-?); Dakar (?-1959).
Mali (Federation), 1959-1960. Journal officiel de la Fédération du Mali. Dakar, 1959-1960.
Senegal. Gazette. 1856-present. Le moniteur du Sénégal et dépendances, journal officiel (1856-1859, 1864-1888?); Journal officiel du Sénégal (1888-1959; also supplement Sénégal Niger 1906-1921); Journal officiel de la République du Sénégal (1959-present). Saint-Louis, Senegal (1856-1959, 1864-1888 and beyond); later Rufisque: Imprimerie Nationale.
UEMOA. Union Économique et Monétaire Ouest Africaine. 1996-present. Bulletin officiel. Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso : Commission UEMOA.
--Publications of monetary authorities:
Banque de l'Afrique Occidentale. Annual report. 1901/1902-1964/1965. Assemblée générale ... procès-verbal et rapport du conseil d'administration. Paris: Banque de l'Afrique Occidentale.
Banque de l'Afrique Occidentale. Bulletin. 1956-1965? Bulletin économique et financier France-Afrique noire. Paris: Banque de l'Afrique Occidentale.
Banque du Sénégal. Annual report. 1855/1856-1900/1901. Assemblée générale. Paris?: Banque du Sénégal.
BCEAO. Banque Centrale des États de l'Afrique de l'Ouest. Annual report. 1959-present. Rapport d'activité (1959-1989); Rapport annuel (1990-present). Paris (1959-1977); Dakar (1978-present): Banque Centrale des États de l'Afrique de l'Ouest.
BCEAO. Banque Centrale des États de l'Afrique de l'Ouest. Bulletin. 1959-present. Notes d'information et statistiques. Paris (1959-1978); Dakar (1978-present): Banque Centrale des États de l'Afrique de l'Ouest.
IEAOFT. Institut d'Émission de l'Afrique Occidentale Française et du Togo. Annual report. 1955/1956-1958. Rapport d'activité. Paris: Institut d'Émission de l'Afrique Occidentale Française et du Togo.
IEAOFT. Institut d'Émission de l'Afrique Occidentale Française et du Togo. Bulletin. 1956-1959. Notes d'information et statistiques. Paris: Institut d'Émission de l'Afrique Occidentale Française et du Togo.
--Web site of the current monetary authority (viewed 20 September 2005):
<http://www.bceao.int>
--Other publications or Web sites:
Comité Monétaire de la Zone Franc. Secrétariat. 1953-present. Premier [etc.] rapport annuel du Comité de la zone franc établi en exécution du décret du 5 fevrier 1952 (art. 4, §2) (1953-1956); La zone franc en 1957: cinquième rapport annuel du Comité Monétaire de la Zone Franc (1957); La zone franc en ...: rapport publié par le Secrétariat du Comité Monétaire de la Zone Franc (1958-1983); La zone franc: rapport ...: publié par le Secrétariat du Comité Monétaire de la Zone Franc (1984-1991); La zone franc: rappport annuel ...; publié par le Secrétariat du Comité Monétaire de la Zone Franc (1992-2003; inside page says La zone franc en ...); Rapport annuel de la zone franc (2004-present; inside cover says La zone franc: rapport annuel ...). Paris: Imprimerie Nationale (1953-1956); Secrétariat du Comité Monétaire de la Zone Franc (1957-1991; 1957 is a mimeo with no explicit publication information); Banque de France (1992-present). Recent issues are available on the Web site of the Banque de France, <http://www.banque-france.fr/fr/eurosys/zonefr/zonefr.htm>.
France. Commision de Surveillance des Banques Coloniales. 1875-1939. Rapport au président de la république sur les opérations des banques coloniales d'émission pendant l'exercise ... (1873/1874-1936/1937); Rapport au président de la république sur les opérations des banques coloniales d'émission ... (1927/1929-1936/1937). Paris: Imprimerie Nationale.
Main secondary sources:
Alibert, Jacques. 1983. De la vie coloniale au défi international: Banque du Sénégal, BAO, BIAO, 130 ans de banque en Afrique. Paris: Chotard et Associés Éditeurs.
Amaïzo, Yves Ekoué. 2001. Naissance d'une banque de la zone franc, 1841-1901: priorité aux propriétaires d'esclaves. Paris: Éditions L'Harmattan. (Concerns the Banque du Sénégal.)
BCEAO. 2000. Banque Centrale des États de l'Afrique de l'Ouest. L'histoire de l'Union monétaire ouest africaine, v. 1 (Des origines à 1958), v. 2 (De 1958 à 1977), v. 3 (Bilan et perspectives). Paris: Georges Israël Éditeur. English translation History of the West African Monetary Union, v. 1 (From the Origins to 1958), v. 2 (1958-1977), v. 3 (Assessments and Prospects). Paris:
BCEAO. 2004. Banque Centrale des États de l'Afrique de l'Ouest. "Chronologie des évènements marquants de l'histoire de la BCEAO et de l'UMOA," édition du 30 juin 2004 révisée, at <http://www.bceao.int> (viewed 20 December 2005). Georges Israël, 2002.
Gérardin, Hubert. 1989, 1994. La zone franc. Tome 1: histoire et institutions. Tome 2: La dynamique de l'intégration monétaire et ses contraintes. Paris: Éditions L'Harmattan.
IMF ARER. 1950-present. International Monetary Fund. Annual Report on Exchange Restrictions (1950-1978), Annual Report on Exchange Arrangements and Exchange Restrictions (1979-1988), Exchange Arrangements and Exchange Restrictions: Annual Report (1989-present). Washington: International Monetary Fund. (Contains information on IMF member countries and some of their dependencies.)
Leduc, Michel. 1965. Les institutions monétaires africaines: pays francophones. Paris: Éditions A. Pedone.
Neurrisse, André. 1987. Le franc CFA. Paris: Librarie Générale de Droit et de Jurisprudence.
Rocheteau, Guy, with Jean Roche. 1982. Pouvoir financier et indépendance économique en Afrique: le cas du Sénégal. Bondy and Paris: Orstom Karthala.
Monetary authorities: Senegal
| Dates | Type | Name | Source | Remarks |
| 4 August 1855
-30 September 1955 |
private monopoly issue (as part of a currency union) | Banque du Sénégal (headquarters Saint-Louis, Senegal) / Banque de l'Afrique Occidentale (headquarters Paris, France) from 1 July 1901 | France, imperial decree of 21 December 1853 (establishing Banque du Sénégal), reprinted in BCEAO; decree of 29 June 1901 (establishing Banque de l'Afrique Occidentale); law of 29 January 1929 (extending its charter for 20 years and introducing minority government ownership); both reprinted in BCEAO (2000, v. 1: 220-33, 301-3, 380-3) | A proposal for a previous bank, to be called the Caisse d'Escompte, was refused by the French government (France, Ministry of Colonies, Dispatch No. 224, 5 September 1848). The Banque du Sénégal and Banque de l'Afrique Occidentale were established to be the monopoly issuers for all of French West and Equatorial Africa. The Banque du Sénégal was established as a way of compensating slave owners after slavery was abolished in French colonies; slave owners received some original shares in the bank. It opened in Saint-Louis on 4 August 1855, the first bank in the vast expanse of western and equatorial Africa that became the French colonies. The Banque de l'Afrique Occidentale was established as the successor to Banque du Sénégal to tap capital on a wider basis and establish a bigger branch network. The second competing bank was the Banque Française de l'Afrique (headquarters Paris, France), in Dakar, in 1904 (Alibert 1983: 205). During the First World War, individual colonies in French West Africa issued small-denomination government notes called bons de caisse to substitute for coins, |
| 1 October 1955
-3 April 1959 |
joint monetary institute (as part of a currency union) | Institut d'Émission de l'Afrique Occidentale Française et du Togo (IEAOFT) (headquarters Paris, France) | France, Decree No. 55-103, 20 January 1955; Decree No. 55-938, 15 July 1955; interministerial arrêté of 29 September 1955 | France nationalized the note issue in accord with its policy since the 1930s. France, decree of 31 August 1957, transferred issuance of coins from the French Treasury to the IEAOFT effective 1 October 1957. Notes for different member countries were issued with different serial number codes to provide a basis for calculating each country's share of seigniorage. |
| 4 April 1959
-present (2005) |
joint central bank (as part of a currency union) | Banque Centrale des États de l'Afrique de l'Ouest (BCEAO) (headquarters Paris, France / Dakar, Senegal from July 1978) | France, Ordonnance No. 59-491, 4 April 1959 | The monetary institute was converted into a central bank to prepare for the imminent independence of its members. French influence reduced by the following agreements: Traité instituant une Union monétaire ouest-africaine and Accord de coopération entre la République française et les Républiques membres de l'Union monétaire ouest-africaine, both signed in Paris 12 May 1962, and an agreement of 4 December 1973 (see France, Law No. 74-626, 2 July 1974). "Africanization" was completed with the transfer of the central bank's headquarters to Dakar, Senegal. Notes for different member countries were issued with different serial number codes to provide a basis for calculating each country's share of seigniorage. Senegal joined the IMF on 31 August 1962. |
Exchange rate arrangements: Senegal
| Dates | Official arrangement | Source | Unofficial arrangement, if different | Remarks |
| 1659
-1817 |
fixed; used French colonial livre (1.5 French colonial livres = 1 French livre [livre tournois]), and British and other foreign coins (see Remarks) | general histories | French occupation of the island of Saint-Louis, at the mouth of the Senegal River, began in 1659; it succeeded a nearby French fort that had been manned starting in 1638. British forces occupied Saint-Louis and the island of Gorée, near Dakar, in 1693, 1758-1763, 1779-1783, and 1800-1817 (different sources differ slightly on the dates). Gorée had previously been occupied by the Portuguese, Dutch, and English at various times. | |
| 1817
-29 August? 1826 |
fixed; used French colonial livre (1.5 French colonial livres = 1 French livre [livre tournois]) | general histories | British occupation of Saint-Louis and Gorée ceased, so usage of British coins as legal tender also seems to have ceased. | |
| 30 August? 1826
-3 August 1855 |
fixed; used French franc | France, Règlement du Commandant et Administrateur du Sénégal et Dépendences, 15 June 1826, cited in Leduc (1965: 13) | The 1826 command forbade colonial units of account, such as the livre (by then obsolete in France); only legally admitted monies or French money was allowed in administrative, judiciary, or commercial activities. I speculate that its effective date was 30 August 1826 based on a remark about another French colony, Guadeloupe, in Mazard (1953: 71). French African colonies admitted British coins and in some instances silver Maria Theresa thalers as legal tender up to the mid 1920s, and perhaps later in some cases. The French franc was a decimal currency. France, royal ordinance of 17 August 1825, authorized special bronze 5- and 10-centime coins for Senegal, which were made legal and even forced tender (France, arrêté of 16 August 1826, cited in BCEAO 2004). However, after 1840 no special coins were minted for France's African colonies until 1944; the colonies used French coins. | |
| 4 August 1855
-22 November 1943 |
pegged (as part of a currency union); 1 local franc = 1 French franc | BCEAO (2000, v. 1: 233) | The Banque du Sénégal established its headquarters in Saint-Louis, so the exchange rate changed from fixed to pegged. The bank's successor, the Banque de l'Afrique Occidentale, was required starting in 1929 to make exchanges between France and West Africa without commission fees other than the actual cost of post office or telegraph costs (France and Banque de l'Afrique Occidentale, agreement of 24 February 1927, article 8, reprinted in BCEAO 2000, v. 1: 378). Legally, local francs in what was to become the CFA franc zone were not separate from the French franc until 26 December 1945. | |
| 23 November 1943
-5 December 1944 |
pegged (as part of a currency union); 200 local francs = UKŁ1, or 50 local francs = US$1 | Anglo-Free French agreement of 2 February 1943, cited in Mazard (1953: 106) | By the agreement of 2 February 1943, in many of the areas under its control, the Free French government devalued local francs from pre-Second World War rates based on 176.625 French francs = UKŁ1, or 43.80 French francs = US$1. French West Africa switched allegiance from the Vichy French government to the Free French government on 23 November 1943. | |
| 6 December 1944
-25 December 1945 |
pegged (as part of a currency union); 1 local franc = 1 French franc | Anglo-Free French agreement of 8 February 1944, cited in Mazard (1953: 106) | Following the liberation of most of France by the Allies during the Second World War, the metropolitan French franc was devalued to the level of the overseas francs under Free French control (200 local francs = UKŁ1, or 50 local francs = US$1). Doing so in effect restored the French franc as the anchor currency. | |
| 26 December 1945
-16 October 1948 |
pegged (as part of a currency union); 1 (West African) CFA franc = 1.70 French francs | France, Decree No. 45-0136, 25 December 1945 | France created the CFA franc at a premium from the former 1-to-1 rate of local francs with the French franc. The premium offset most of the French franc's devaluation from 50 to 119.10699 French francs = US$1 on 25 December 1945. The revaluation reflected lower wartime economic destruction in the colonies than in France. The new cross rate with the pound sterling was 300 CFA francs = UKŁ1. The name "franc" for the currency came from the French franc. For the meaning of CFA, see the category "Other" in the country information above. | |
| 17 October 1948
-31 December 1959 |
pegged (as part of a currency union); 1 (West African) CFA franc = 2 French francs | France, Ministry of Finance and Economic Affairs, Avis No. 352 de l'Office des Changes, 17 October 1948 | The CFA franc had followed the French franc's devaluation on 26 January 1948, but this time it was in effect revalued against French franc to offset almost all of the French franc's devaluation from 214.392 to 264 French francs = US$1 on 17 October 1948. | |
| 1 January 1960
-30 August 1971 |
pegged (as part of a currency union); 50 (West African) CFA francs = 1 new French franc | France, Ordonnance No. 58-1341, 27 December 1958; Ministry of Finance and Economic Affairs, Circulaire du 19 novembre 1959 relative au nouveau franc, 19 November 1959; Decree No. 59-1450, 22 December 1959 | France redenominated its franc at 1 new French franc = 100 old French francs. Members of the CFA franc zone never registered gold parities with the IMF. Gold convertibility for all countries ended in practice when the United States abandoned the gold standard on 15 August 1971. | |
| 31 August 1971
-20 March 1974 |
pegged, dual rate (as part of a currency union); official rate (West African) 50 CFA francs = 1 French franc | IMF ARER (1972: 368-9) | The second rate, called
the financial rate, was
a managed or perhaps
independent float.
RR: Very low parallel market premium. |
Established a dual exchange rate following France's doing so on 21 August 1971. |
| 21 March 1974
-1 August 1993 |
pegged (as part of a currency union); 50 (West African) CFA francs = 1 French franc | Senegal, Circular No. 123, 24 June 1974; Order No. 6.3444, 27 June 1974; both cited in IMF ARER (1975: 410) | RR: Premiums 8-11% March-June 1983. (My comment: this was a period of fear of devaluation.) | The CFA franc zone ended its dual exchange rate the same day as France. The regulations supported the new exchange rate arrangement after the fact. |
| 2 August 1993
-11 January 1994 |
pegged (as part of a currency union); 50 (West African) CFA francs = 1 French franc, with restricted convertibility | Conseil des Ministres de l'Union Monétaire Ouest Africaine, decision made 28 July 1993 and announced 2 August 1993, communiqué in BCEAO bulletin, July 1993: no page | Members of the Banque Centrale des États de l'Afrique de l'Ouest (BCEAO) ceased redeeming CFA franc notes in circulation outside the CFA franc zone. The policy remains in force today (2005). On 17 December 1993, members of the BCEAO suspended redemption of CFA franc notes issued by the Banque des États de l'Afrique Centrale (BEAC) circulating in BCEAO countries. | |
| 12 January 1994
-31 December 1998 |
pegged (as part of a currency union); 100 (West African) CFA francs = 1 French franc | Conseil des Ministres de l'Union Monétaire Ouest Africaine, communiqué of 17 December 1993, in BCEAO bulletin, December 1993: no page; confirmed by Déclaration commune des chefs d'État et de gouvernement des pays africains membres de la zone UMOA et BEAC, 11 January 1994, in BCEAO bulletin, January 1994: no page; and Conseil des Ministres de l'Union Monétaire Ouest Africaine, communiqué of 11 January 1994, in BCEAO bulletin, January 1994: no page | The CFA franc was devalued after years of bad credit extended by CFA franc zone central banks to government enterprises depleted foreign reserves. Convertibility of the CFA franc into the French franc resumed. By 1995, authorized banks charged commissions of 2% onpurchases and sales of French francs and comissions of 0.1-0.125% on purchases and sales of foreign exchange other than those directly related to external transactions. They also levied a commision of 0.25% on transfers to all countries outside WAEMU (BCEAO), which they were required to surrender to the Treasury (IMF ARER 1996: 718). | |
| 1 January 1999
-present (2005) |
pegged (as part of a currency union); 655.957 (West African) CFA francs = 1 European euro | Conseil des Ministres de l'Union Monétaire Ouest Africaine, Communiqué de la Banque Centrale des États de l'Afrique de l'Ouest sur le taux de conversion du franc CFA par rapport à l'euro, 21 December 1998, in BCEAO bulletin, January 1994: no page | The French franc ended its existence as a separate currency, replaced by the European euro. The CFA franc switched to the European euro as its anchor currency, at the prevailing cross rate with the French franc. The commission fees mentioned in the previous period were still in effect at the end of 2004 (IMF ARER 2005: 827). |