Negotiations over the East African Monetary Union protocol that was signed yesterday have been long and often strenuous.
However,
in playing out the signing ceremony in Kampala, presidents from the
five partner states have set the East African Community (EAC) on a
perhaps more difficult journey.
The protocol sets out a
10-year road map for economic convergence among EAC member states that
will culminate in the adoption of a yet-to-be-named regional currency.
It
is expected that the achievement of the monetary union will improve the
business climate in the region by cutting cross-border transaction
costs. Businesses will also be better protected from foreign exchange
distortion by a theoretically more stable currency.
“Having
a monetary union would enhance free movement of goods and people as
well as increase the investment opportunities in the region,” said
Institute of Economic Affairs analyst, Mr John Mutua.
Before
this can be achieved, however, the region will have to confront old
ghosts. The sort of macro-economic convergence envisioned will require
significant ceding of sovereignty over certain aspects of fiscal
planning. Sovereignty has always been a sticky issue among the partner
states.
But the EAC will first have to fully implement
two previous protocols that have been frustrated by protectionism,
bureaucracy and poor infrastructure.
A draft monetary union protocol seen by the Sunday Nation stipulates that the full implementation of the customs union and common market protocols, signed in 2000 and 2005 respectively, as the prerequisites towards the journey to a single currency.
A draft monetary union protocol seen by the Sunday Nation stipulates that the full implementation of the customs union and common market protocols, signed in 2000 and 2005 respectively, as the prerequisites towards the journey to a single currency.
The customs union was expected to scrap
tariffs while the common market protocol was to allow for the freedom of
movement for factors of production.
Economists
maintain that without the full implementation of these two, the full
impact of the monetary union will not be realised.
“If
you cannot do business freely across the borders or move your goods, you
cannot feel the full benefits of a single currency,” said economist
Gitau Githongo.
NON-TARIFF BARRIERS
Recent
efforts by three partner states, Kenya, Uganda and Rwanda, to
fast-track the elimination of non-tariff barriers to trade in the region
have led to fragmentation of the EAC.
In trying to
establish a customs territory, scrapping tourist visa requirements and
easing the movement of people within their borders, the three countries
have been accused of alienating Burundi and Tanzania.
Mr
Githongo says that disagreements on such basic levels do not portend
well for the implementation of the monetary union. Nevertheless, he
contends that actualising the two protocols may be the easier part.
Establishing the mechanisms for fiscal and monetary convergence may
prove trickier.
The draft protocol envisions
harmonisation of government policy as pertains revenue collection and
expenditure. Countries are supposed to disclose their budget financing
and implementation processes.
This is already
happening–to a certain extent. Countries in the region have made the
symbolic step of harmonising their fiscal calendars and reading their
budgets on the same day.
Levels of reliance on tax
revenue as opposed to debt for financing budgets in the countries still
differ. This is problematic given that one of the convergence criteria
listed by the protocol is maintaining a debt-to-gross domestic product
(GDP) ratio of no higher than 50 per cent.
Despite
making gains made over the last decade, at the close of the 2012/2013
financial year in June, Kenya recorded a 51.7pc debt to GDP ratio.
“Debt
levels should not be outside the sustainability levels in any single
country. It would not be good for stability of the single currency,”
said Kenya Institute of Public Policy Research and Analysis (Kippra)
analyst, Benson Kiriga.
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