Tuesday, November 18, 2008

AU/ECA: Assessing regional integration report

The ink was hardly dry on my other post today when this article from the Daily Monitor in Addis popped into the inbox: A new report on monetary and financial integration in Africa will be released this week by the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (ECA) jointly with the African Union. The report finds that "African countries are experiencing enormous difficulties in achieving the desired macroeconomic convergence criteria set by Regional Economic Communities (RECs)". The report indicates that the Economic and Monetary Community of Central Africa (CEMAC) and West African Economic and Monetary Union (UEMOA), among others, have done well in maintaining single digit inflation, but the remaining countries performed poorly partly due to negative external shocks, large budget deficit (external debt ratios as a percentage of GDP still remain as high as 70% in some countries), lack of reliable statistics and poor growth performance. The convergence criteria established by the Regional Economic Communities (RECs) include agreed targets such as budgetary balance, inflation and public debt.

ARIA III shows that regional economic communities exhibit considerable variation relative to both the overall trend and its components. Country performance also varies considerably. On the whole, the report demonstrates that Africa's regional economic communities have done better at controlling inflation and budget deficits. It also notes that they have not done so well at reducing external debt. Economic growth rates are also generally encouraging across Africa. Integration blocs that already exist as monetary unions tend to do better in terms of macroeconomic policy convergence. Overall, African countries are making tremendous efforts towards sound macro-economic policy convergence in areas including inflation, budget deficits, and economic growth rates. A number of RECs are also actively promoting step-by-step approaches towards monetary and financial integration within their communities or sub-regions. The report is rich in examples of such laudable programs and efforts.

As a major recommendation, ARIA III points to the need for African countries to mainstream regional monetary and macroeconomic objectives in their national development strategies. The report calls upon national authorities to have a clear sense of their own development objectives. "They should be more responsible in macroeconomic policy making and set their own priorities for exchange rates, fiscal policies and interest rates", says the report in conclusion.

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