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Is WAMZ an Optimum Currency Area (OCA)? Tamsir Cham20 Abstract This paper assesses the feasibility of West African Monetary Zone (WAMZ) in forming a common currency using Macroeconomic convergence and Optimum Currency Area (OCA) criteria. We seek to answer the question: Does WAMZ meet the Macroeconomic convergence and OCA criteria? We use the same benchmark criteria that were used by European Monetary Union (EMU). In addition, in most of our analysis, we used the existing monetary union -West Africa Economic and Monetary Union (WAEMU) as a comparison zone. The empirical analysis revealed that the zone does not meet the Macroeconomic convergence criteria. We then examined the OCA criteria. Out of the three optimum currency area criteria considered i.e. openness, synchronization of shocks, and labor mobility, the zone did well in openness criterion. However, labor mobility within the zone is relatively low and shocks are not uniform. Consequently, we concluded that the zone failed to meet the OCA criteria as well. However WAMZ member countries have made some progress in meeting the required criteria. Since 2007 all WAMZ member countries have shown a single digit inflation rate. Both inflation and debt-to-GDP figures show a downward trend since 2005. JEL Classification Codes: E31, E41, E42, F22, F33, F41 Keywords: Macroeconomic convergence, Optimum Currency Area, Openness, Inflation, Labor mobility, WAMZ The adoption of the euro by the European Monetary Union (EMU) and its successful launching in January 1999 has stimulated interest in the formation of currency union arrangements around the globe. Prior to the euro, other currency unions have been in existence, including the Central Africa Economic Monetary Union (CAEMU), the West African Economic Monetary Union (WAEMU), the Eastern Caribbean Currency Union (ECCU), and the Common Monetary Authority (CMA). Monetary integration in West Africa is one of the programs of the Economic Community of West African States’ (ECOWAS) agenda. ECOWAS Monetary Cooperation Program (EMCP) was established in 1987 with the intention to form one monetary zone and one 20 The author is the Director of Economic Management and Planning Unit at The Ministry of Finance & Economic Affairs, Banjul, The Gambia. The author can be contacted at [email protected] , Tel: (+220) 9338289, Fax: (+220) 4228551. I am grateful to Dr. Ransford W. Palmer, Dr. Joseph Augustine, Dr. Satish Wadhawan, Dr. Wayne Patterson, Dr. Rupert DeLisle Worrell, Dr. William Spriggs, Dr. Micheal Ojo, Serign Cham, Ndiama Diop, Djibrilla Issa, and Deo Ndikumana, for their comments and suggestions. I am also grateful to Mrs. Absa Jobe-Sallah, for providing me with data. All errors or interpretations remain mine. common currency in the sub-region. Recently, five West African countries decided to form a monetary union. This monetary union zone is called the West African Monetary Zone (WAMZ)21. It will be the second monetary union within ECOWAS. As discussed in WAMI (2005), the target date was 2005, but the date has now been deferred to December 2009 to give room for countries to be better prepared for a full-fledged monetary union. By forming a common currency, the zone can benefit from enhanced trade, investment, fiscal discipline, economic growth, price stability; reduced inflation level and macroeconomic stability. The ECOWAS zone mainly consists of Francophone and Anglophone countries. 22 The Francophone countries established a monetary union in 1948. The CFA zone has shown commitment to a fixed exchange rate by irrevocably fixing the CFA franc to the French franc at fixed parity23. This paper examines whether WAMZ member countries meet the macroeconomic convergence criteria. It also seeks to answer the question: Is WAMZ an optimum currency area (OCA)? This paper differs from earlier studies in the following: First, it goes beyond the standard method of assessing convergence criteria using budget deficit and debt-to-GDP ratio. Second the paper examines co-movement of prices, GDP, terms of trade, current account and not pattern of currency bloc24. Consequently, the paper looks at the existing traditional convergence criteria, the average co-movements of these variables and the evolution of these variables overtime. The paper also seeks to compare the behavior of these variables with the existing currency union in West Africa – WAEMU. The major limitation of the paper is that we go not look into intra regional trade and trade intensity for the zone. Hence currency union (WAMZ) potential impact on trade is beyond the scope of the paper which can be a good area of research. This paper is organized as follows: In section 2, the feasibility of WAMZ from macroeconomic convergence criteria is examined; in Section 3, OCA criteria and whether WAMZ constitutes OCA; Section 4 contains the data sources, methodology, and empirical results. Section 5 concludes the paper. 21 22 23 24 The five countries are The Gambia, Ghana, Guinea, Nigeria, and Sierra Leone. And two countries Guinea-Bissau and Cape Verde colonized by the Protégées. The fixed parity was altered only once in 1994. See Yehoue 2005 90 91 MACROECONOMIC CONVERGENCE REQUIREMENTS According to European Union Commission (1990), monetary union requires virtually complete convergence of economic variables. Monetary union, however, accommodates regional divergences in relative wage levels that arise as a result of differences in productivity and competitiveness. Charalambos Tsangarides and Mahvash Saeed Qureshi (2005) reviewed the literature on convergence and OCA using cluster analysis to assess the readiness and sustainability of monetary union by classifying West African countries into groups according to their performance towards achieving the OCA and convergence criteria for common currency adoption. Their results revealed that inflation is higher in WAMZ than WAEMU zone. They also concluded that debt-to-GDP has been steadily declining over the years in WAMZ zone. Xavier Debrun, Paul Masson and Catherine Pattillo (2002) surveyed OCA to analyze the costs and benefits of the proposed monetary union using a simple theoretical framework calibrated to reflect some of the region’s key economic and political features. They assessed the net gainers and losses based on the correlation of shocks to the terms of trade (TOT). Yehoue (2005) examined whether empirical investigation points to the gradual emergence of currency blocs in Africa. As discussed in De Grauwe (2003), in situations where countries are catching up in levels of productivity and income, there will as a result be some margin for consumer prices on average to rise a little faster than in the community as a whole as the prices of non-tradable services converge on the levels found in high income countries. Budget balances and current account balances can diverge even more substantially. The essential requirement for budgetary policy is sustainability of the public debt without resorting to monetary financing. Consequently, it is important that a reasonable degree of convergence of price inflation and reduction of excessive budget deficits are achieved before the irrevocable fixing of the exchange rates. The convergence of price, cost performance, and budgetary policies, however, will be strongly influenced by the credibility of commitments to a given future monetary regime, so long as the time-horizon is not too long. For this reason, commitments to the later stages of monetary union should not be held up until the ultimately required degree of convergence is achieved. Consequently lack of commitment and not leveling the playing field i.e. failure to put macroeconomic fundamentals in order, will make the sustainability of the monetary union unattainable. Since WAMZ is characterized on the one hand by imperfect economic integration and on the other hand by a single monetary policy, the question arises as to what degree of price, and more generally macroeconomic convergence, is required for the stability of the zone? Currently, inflation can frequently diverge in the short run by few percentage points. In the long run however, price inflation does not have to diverge by more than a fraction of one percentage point per year across countries. In addition, member countries should retain autonomy regarding short-run budgetary policy. However, excessive deficits that lead to 91 92 exploding public debts are not compatible with monetary union, essentially because the policy of price stability might be put at risk if individual countries run up excessive public debts or deficits. Therefore, proper coordination of fiscal policies among member states is required. According to European Commission (1990), the well-functioning of a monetary union is not limited to macroeconomic convergence of its member countries. An effective management of macroeconomic policy for the union requires the convergence in policy preferences, or at least agreement on the policy objectives, and therefore on the weighting of targets and choice of instruments of economic policy. Given that meeting macroeconomic convergence criteria is the centerpiece for entry into monetary union, and guarantee of its smooth functioning, member countries must attain and comply with certain target requirements that need to be satisfied before and after the monetary union launches. According to the European Commission (1990), certain conditions are outlined in a monetary convergence as essential for the successful launching and sustaining of a monetary union.25 These conditions are as follows: First, the inflation rate for WAMZ members should be almost 5 percentage points. A country joining a monetary union must be within 1.5 percentage points of the average of the three lowest inflation rates within the zone; second, the long-term interest rate of the country joining the single currency must not exceed by more than 2 percentage points of the interest rates observed in the three countries with the lowest inflation rates, on the grounds that high long-term rates reflect high expected inflation; third, the exchange rate must have remained within the normal bands of the existing WAMZ without severe tensions for at least two years. The other conditions relate to fiscal policy in that the debt-to-GDP ratio (debt/GDP) should not exceed 60 percentage points and deficit-to-GDP ratio (deficit/GDP) should be 5 percent or less.26 In addition to meeting the macroeconomic convergence criteria, the zone needs to satisfy the Optimal Currency Area criteria that are discussed in the next section. IS WAMZ AN OPTIMAL CURRENCY AREA (OCA)? A common currency bloc is a region where a single currency or basket of currencies pegs to a currency which circulates and is freely accepted in the region. It is a region where a single supranational central bank conducts monetary policy. It also takes the form where all the values of monetary units are fixed in relation to one another. The functioning of common currency requires that the exchange rate within the region is fixed in relation to one another but varies in relation to other countries or regions outside the currency bloc. It is 25 26 WAMZ modified the European Union convergence criteria. See WAMI (2005) 92 93 widely accepted that in a monetary union arrangement, only one single central bank manages the pool of reserves and issue currency. According to discussions by Mundell (1961), Mckinnon (1963), Kenen (1969), Ghosh (1994), Frankel and Rose (2000), Alesina, Barro, Tenreyro (2002), and others, an OCA constitutes economies that are affected systematically by disturbances. It is an area where all the regions within the area face similar kinds of economic shocks and labor is freely mobile within the area. Whether a region adopting a common currency satisfies the OCA criteria or not has not been discussed at length in the economic literature. The optimum currency area literature asserts that meeting OCA criteria are necessary and sufficient conditions under which two or more countries can share the same currency without an adverse effect. This assertion is grounded with the assumption that nominal exchange rates are very effective; otherwise it is meaningless for a country to abandon its own currency. The exchange rate can serve as a major macroeconomic stabilizer in that it affects relative prices of traded goods, non-traded goods, or the ratio of exports to imports, and real wages that are paid to workers by producers. Consequently, for a country or group of countries to enter into monetary union there need to be certain conditions that make the functioning of nominal exchange rate less appealing. According to Mundell (1961), Mckinnon (1963), Kenen (1969), Euperan Union Commission (1990) three criteria need to be satisfied for a region to be considered an Optimum Currency Area. The three main criteria are well articulated in the optimum currency area literature. The first criterion is mutual openness to trade. The greater a region is open to trade the less effective the nominal exchange rate is since most prices are determined at the regional level which makes nominal exchange rate relatively ineffective in altering relative price ratios. The second criterion discussed is the diversification of individual economies. The more diversified an economy is, the less it suffers from economic shocks. The last but not the least criterion is the mobility of inputs, particularly labor. The more mobile labor is in a region forming a monetary union, the less the effect of adverse shocks on an economy since labor can migrate from the affected area to the unaffected area. The ease in mobility of labor lessens the need for an exchange rate to act as an adjustment mechanism. These criteria will be examined within the context of WAMZ zone to evaluate the extent to which it satisfies these criteria. This section provides an answer to the following question: Is WAMZ an OCA? Robert Mundell (1961) the pioneering Nobel Prize winner, was the first to articulate the idea of OCAs where the cost associated with currency union membership would be reduced. According to Mundell (1961), optimality relates to the condition of labor market. He argued that if the prevailing exchange rate regime, either fixed or flexible, can maintain external balance without causing unemployment or demand induced inflation, then that regime is optimal. Mundell (1961) further asserted that if a currency regime within a given area causes unemployment somewhere in that area or force some other portion of the same 93 94 area to accept inflation as a remedy to unemployment, then it is not optimal. 27 Mundell contends that interregional factor mobility can substitute for changes in regional exchange rates, and that the entire zone through which labor can move freely defines the right domain for a monetary union. With labor mobility, the two regions comprise an optimum currency area. Subsequently, others surveyed the literature and developed arguments based on Mundell’s work. Among the most renowned authors in the field are Mckinnon (1963) and Kenen (1969). Mckinnon’s work was a continuation of Mundell’s but proposed further requirements that there needed to be high intra-area trade within the region. He described a single currency area as an area where monetary-fiscal policy and flexible external exchange rates can be used to give the best solution of three mutually exclusive objectives of monetary policy.28 Kenen (1969) built on Mundell’s work but emphasized the need for an economically diversified area with potent fiscal policy at its disposal. However, he claimed that Mundell’s definitions were more implicit than explicit as they relate to the delineation of an economic region. A large body of research developed from the earlier discussions of Mundell, Mickinnon and Kenen. All researchers centered on one of the following three criteria: openness, diversification of individual economies, and mobility of inputs across the area - labor in particular. Some researchers surveyed risk of country specific shocks. One set of study examines co-movements of key macroeconomic variables like the GDP, unemployment, inflation, or current account balances across European countries (Cohen and Wyplosz, 1989). Other studies compare shocks across regions with shocks across countries (De Grauwe and Vanhaverbeke, 1993; Von Hagen and Neumann, 1994). 27 According to Mundell, a currency area comprising different countries with national currencies the pace of employment in deficit countries is set by the willingness of surplus countries to inflate. But in a currency area comprising many regions and single currency, the pace of inflation is set by willingness of the central authorities to allow unemployment in deficit regions. But a currency area of either type cannot prevent both unemployment and inflation among members. The fault lies not with the type of currency area, but with the domain of the currency area. The optimum currency area is not the world. 28 The following are the conflicting objectives: attainment of full employment, maintenance of balance of payment and internal price stability. 95 94 For the input mobility criterion, studies have shown that labor in Europe is not as mobile as in the United States. Blanchard and Katz (1992) find that in United States when a particular region is hit by an adverse shock, a large proportion of the subsequent drop in employment is matched by labor migration. Krugman (1993) inferred that economic integration leads to increased regional specialization. Frankel and Rose (1998) empirically rejected Krugman’s conjecture as they find that integration leads to more diversification. As a consequence, the optimum currency area criteria are endogenously determined. Alesina and Barro (2002) have extended Mundell’s (1961) analysis. All their work focused on the trade-off between the costs and benefits of monetary unions. Their work attempted to size Europe up against the Mundell-Mckinnon-Kenen criteria. In summary, the criteria: factor mobility (Mundell, 1961), trade integration (Mckinnon, 1963), and a similar regional production pattern (Kenen, 1969), constitute an optimum currency area. Masson, Pattillo (2004, 2002, 2001) surveyed the literature of the optimum currency area to investigate the monetary geography of West Africa, the feasibility of a single currency for Africa and a monetary union for ECOWAS member countries. Debrun, Masson and Pattillo (2002) assessed the feasibility of WAMZ to investigate the winners and losers. Their study revealed Nigeria being the only gainer while the rest (Gambia, Ghana, Guinea, and Sierra Leone) are losers. Devarajan and de melo (1987) conducted a study on CFA countries in West Africa. They used a statistical analysis approach to assess the benefits of participating in a monetary union. In the next section, I examine whether WAMZ zone satisfies the macroeconomic convergence and OCA criteria. DATA, METHODOLOGY AND RESULTS Data Source Interest rate and exchange rate data are extracted from the International Monetary Fund’s International Finance Statistics (IFS). Data on debt and deficit as a percentage of GDP are obtained from West African Monetary Institute (WAMI) Data base. Real output data was extracted from WAMI Data base. These data are expressed in US dollars using 2000 as the base year. Time series with yearly data on outputs from 1980 to 2005 are used. For countries that have fewer observations due to unreported data, a relatively shorter period is used. Inflation, exports, imports, investment, current account balance, and terms of trade data are also extracted from International Monetary Fund’s International Finance Statistics (IFS) via WAMI. Bilateral trade data is sourced from World Bank’s World Development Indicators (WDI). We used trade data for the period 1980 to 2005. These data are expressed in US dollars. 95 96 Methodology Macroeconomic Convergence To compute the inflation rate criteria, we used consumer price index (CPI) as a measure of inflation. We first compute the mean inflation from 1980-2005 and also considered inflation rate of individual countries from 2000-2005. Average inflation of a country is the total inflation divided by the number of observations. We then computed the average of the three countries with lowest inflation rate in WAMZ zone and multiplied the result by 1.5 percent to determine whether the countries with higher inflation rate demonstrate the tendency of meeting such criterion. The long-term interest rate criterion is also assessed. The average of the three best performing countries in terms of price stability is computed. The long-term interest rate of a zone member should not exceed 2 percent of the computed average. For the exchange rate requirement, we took the annual growth rate of the respective countries’ exchange rate relative to the U.S. dollar to assess the variability of individual countries’ exchange rate vis-à-vis the US dollar. We used the US dollar because it is the most widely used international currency and most trade in the region involved the US dollar. We used 2005 debt and deficit GDP ratio to assess whether WAMZ member meet fiscal policy 29 criterion. These ratios assess whether WAMZ member countries are within the required thresholds in terms of debt and or deficit GDP ratios. To compute trade share for each country, we used trade data and real GDP from WDI. Country trade share is the ratio of bilateral trade to real GDP. Trade is calculated as export plus imports and trade share is the ratio of trade to GDP. Since accurate trade data is difficult to obtain, we followed Yohoue (2004) and computed bilateral trade between two countries as the average trade reported by the two countries. 29 Debt-to-GDP and deficit-to-GDP ratios 96 97 Optimum Currency Area The computation of Openness Openness is defined as exports plus imports as a share of GDP. To compute individual countries’ relative openness, we added an individual country’s exports and imports and divided the results by the GDP30. Openness is measured as the ratio of the sum of exports and imports to GDP given by Openness exp orts imports GDP The Computation of Co-movements31 To compute the co-movements, we followed Alesina, Barro, and Tenreyro (2002) and Yehoue (2004), paired all countries and computed the relative output Yit Y jt . For every pair (i, j ) , we used the annual time series { Yi ,t Y j ,t }t2005 1980 of the relative per capita GDP, to compute the second-order auto regression. ln Yi ,t Y j ,t a0 a1 ln Yi ,t 1 Y j ,t 1 The estimated residual, ˆtij a 2 ln Yi ,t 2 Y j ,t 2 tij measures the relative output per capita GDP that would not be predictable from the two prior values of relative output. To measure lack of output comovement of relative output, the root-mean-squared error is used given as: MYij 1 T 2 ˆtij T 3 t 1 Where a lower value of MYij , the greater the co-movement of output between the two countries i and j . 30 This is contrary to formula used by Wyplosz (1997), where openness is measure as a ratio exports to GDP 31 I follow Wyplosz et al to measure shock. 97 98 Using the same procedure, the inflation co-movement is computed. The value M ij comes from the estimated residuals from the second-order auto-regression on annual data for relative inflation: ln i ,t i ,t 1 i ,t 2 c0 c1 ln c2 ln vtij j ,t j ,t 1 j ,t 2 The estimated residual v̂tij , measures the relative inflation rate that would not be predictable from the two prior values of the relative inflation rate. Co-movement of relative inflation rate is measure by using root-mean-square error: 1 T 2 vˆtij T 3 t 1 M ij The lower the value of M ij , the greater the co-movement of inflation between the two countries i and j . Similarly, we computed the current account balance co-movement. The value MCAij comes from the estimated residuals from the second-order auto-regression on annual data for relative current account balance: ln CAi ,t CA j ,t b0 b1 ln CAi ,t 1 CA j ,t 1 b2 ln CAi ,t 2 CA j ,t 2 wtij The estimated residual ŵtij , measures the relative current account balance that would not be predictable from the two prior values of the relative current account balance. Co-movement of the relative current account balance is measure by using root-mean-square error: MCAij 1 T 2 wˆ tij T 3 t 1 The lower the value of MCAij , the greater the co-movement of current account balance between the two countries i and j . 98 99 Using the same method, we compute the terms of trade co-movement. The value MTij comes from the estimated residuals from the second-order auto-regression on annual data for relative terms of trade: ln Ti ,t T j ,t d 0 d1 ln Ti ,t 1 T j ,t 1 d 2 ln Ti ,t 2 T j ,t 2 z tij The estimated residual ẑtij , measures the relative terms of trade that would not be predictable from the two prior values of the relative terms of trade. Co-movement of the relative terms of trade is measured by using root-mean-square error: MTij T 1 2 zˆ tij T 3 t 1 The lower the value of MTij , the greater the co-movement of terms of trade between the two countries i and j . Empirical Results In this section we analyzed the feasibility of the formation of currency union based on macroeconomic convergence and optimum currency area criteria. We first began with the macroeconomic convergence. The average inflation rate is tabulated over the period 19802005 in ascending order 32(see Table 1). Though the average inflation rate for WAMZ zone members is moderate compared to WAEMU region, countries such as Sierra Leone and Ghana have recorded high average inflation rates. All WAMZ members’ average inflation for the period 1980- 2005 exceeded the five percent inflation criterion. The inflation variability is computed and we tabulated the result (see Table 2). The following observation is in order: countries with highest average inflation rates top the inflation variability table. In other words, countries with higher inflation rate also show high inflation variability. Sierra Leone topped the inflation rate and inflation variability in the WAMZ zone. In addition Sierra Leone also topped the inflation variability table for the 32 Countries with high inflation are on the top of the list while low inflation countries are found on the bottom of the list. 99 100 ECOWAS zone. WAMZ member countries maintained the same ordering position in terms of inflation mean and variability. The results highlight the fact that inflation and inflation variability co-move. When we compared the inflation rate and inflation variability for WAMZ and WAEMU, WAEMU member countries showed relatively lower inflation rate and inflation variability compared to the former (see tables 1 and 2). The implication is that currency union could result in low average inflation rate and low inflation variability. Considering the convergence criteria for WAMZ member countries, with the exception of Ghana and Sierra Leone the rest of the zone members satisfied the criterion (inflation rate less than or equal to 5 percent or inflation rate less than 1.5 percent of the average of the three lowest rates within WAMZ) using average inflation 1980-2005. However, using 2005 average inflation rate, both Ghana and Sierra Leone meet the criterion. The implication is that the national central banks are committed and are working hard in meeting the convergence criteria. We considered the second criterion where the interest rate of a country joining the currency union must not exceed 2 percentage points of the interest rates observed in the three countries with the lowest inflation rates. The average interest rate for the three lowest countries is 13.1 percent.33 Again with the exception of Ghana, all WAMZ members satisfied such criterion. Ghana’s average interest rate exceeds the 2 percentage points of the average of the three countries. Interest rate movement from the period 1980-2002 is also considered. A closer look at Ghana’s interest rate trend shows it declined in 2000 and further declined by almost 50 percentage points from 2001 to 2002 (see Figure 1). 34 We also looked at the exchange rate criterion.35 Gambia and Nigeria being the only exception, the exchange rates for the rest of the zone fluctuate more than 3 percentage points vis-à-vis the U.S. dollar (see figure 2). This is not in line with the European Union’s standard. The fiscal policy criteria36 are examined using 2005 data. The results are presented in Table 3. Based on the findings, only Nigeria and Sierra Leone satisfied the debt/GDP criterion with a debt to GDP ratio of 33.3 percent and 54.6 percent respectively37, while Gambia, Guinea and Ghana have debt to GDP of 115, 84, and 73 percent respectively. In the deficit 33 To computer the average interest rate, we used average interest rates for Gambia, Guinea and Nigeria using the period 1980-2002 and obtain : {(11.856+15.067+12.29)/3}=13.07 34 When 2005 inflation data is use, the average interest rate for the best three in terms of inflation exceeds the interest rate for the worst two countries. 35 According European Union (1996) a currency will have to remain for at least two years within the normal fluctuation margin on the assumption that the monetary union would continue to observe it original 2.25 percent margin. 36 The fiscal policy criteria constituted budget deficit and public debt criteria. 37 Debt to GDP ratio should be at almost 60 percent. 100 101 to GDP criteria, however, Ghana and Guinea met the requirement with deficit to GDP ratio of 1.3 and 4.1 percent respectively. Looking at previous records, Gambia met the deficit to GDP criterion from 2000-2003 averaging 3.5 percent but slipped off after 2004. Similarly, Nigeria met the criterion from 2003-2004 but also slipped thereafter. The implication is that as countries meet one criterion and are attempting to meet other criteria, the result is often a trade-off and the subsequent missing of an already attained target. Based on the macroeconomic convergence criteria results, it is safe to declare the WAMZ zone failed to meet the macroeconomic convergence criteria. Considering the optimum currency area criteria, we examined the three criteria which are openness, diversification of individual economies, and labor mobility. We began with openness which is measured as the ratio of the sum of exports and imports in goods and services to GDP. Individual WAMZ countries’ members, average WAMZ and WAEMU openness is presented in Table 4. The analysis revealed that WAMZ zone is determined to be more open compared to WAEMU zone. Consequently, one can safely assert that WAMZ zone meets the openness criterion of optimum currency criteria. The second criteria for OCA- asymmetrical of shocks are also considered. For the diversification of individual economies, the co-movements of macroeconomic variables such as GDP, terms of trade, inflation, and current accounts are computed (see Tables 5.1a - 5.4b). The co-movement results are mixed. On the one hand, there is greater co-movement in macroeconomic variables such as GDP and inflation among WAMZ countries than among WAEMU countries (see Tables 5.1a, 5.1b, 5.3a, and 5.3b). On the other hand, there is more co-movement in macroeconomic variables such as terms of trade and current account among WAEMU countries than among WAMZ countries (see Tables 5.2a, 5.2b, 5.4a, and 5.4b). The difference between average GDP co-movement among WAMZ zone and WAEMU zone is relatively small, 0.053 and 0.058 respectively. 38 Similar outcomes also arise from the difference between average terms of trade co-movement among WAEMU and WAMZ countries averaging 0.150 and 0.202 respectively. However, the difference between average inflation and current account balance co-movements between the two zones is striking. Average inflation and current account co-movements among WAMZ members are 0.887 and 1.15 respectively, while inflation and current account co-movement among WAEMU is 1.005 and 0.73 respectively. Two caveats emerge from the analysis. Firstly, the relatively small difference between the averages of GDP co-movements and terms of trade of the two zones could be explained by GDP size and similar kind of shocks that confront their economies. Secondly, the relative large difference between the average inflation rate and current account balance co-movements can be explained as a result of the existing currency union- WAEMU, which serves to impose fiscal discipline and stabilizes 38 Note the smaller the co-movement value the greater the co-movement 101 102 inflation rate within the zone, which is contrary to WAMZ zone. Labor mobility criterion is considered next. Labor mobility within the zone is limited by language and cultural barriers. Though many of the zone members have common official languages 39 that they inherited from their colonial history, the zone comprises a cultural diversity that makes migrating and adapting relatively difficult. In other words, the labor mobility within the zone does not provide enough evidence to help smoothen the asymmetric terms of trade that confront the zone. At this juncture, it is apparent that WAMZ zone does not constitute an OCA. The zone’s failure to meet the convergence and OCA criteria need not prevent it from pursuing its goal since entry into monetary union can lead to endogeneity40 of business cycle. CONCLUSION AND POLICY IMPLICATIONS In this paper the feasibility of WAMZ from macroeconomic convergence and optimum currency areas criteria is examined. We first examine whether the zone meets the macroeconomic convergence criteria. Data set includes annual data from 1980 to 2005. The empirical analysis revealed that the zone does not meet the macroeconomic convergence criteria. We then examine the optimum currency area criteria. Out of the three optimum currency area criteria considered; openness, synchronization of shocks, and labor mobility, the zone did well in openness criteria. However, labor mobility within the zone is relatively low and shocks are not uniform. Consequently the zone failed to meet the OCA criteria as well. The following policy prescriptions are drawn from the study: First, member countries need to open up and encourage movement of people within the region. Consequently, immigration laws need to be relaxed to some extent. A common identification document (WAMZ Passport or WAMZ Identification card) need to be introduced by WAMZ and acceptable to all members. This can ease the free movement of people from one country to another within the region. WAMZ member countries also need to diversify their economies so as to dampen the impact of an adverse economic shock either internal or external. Second, countries that are in a monetary union tend to maintain low inflation and inflation variability. Average inflation in WAEMU zone remained low and at a single digit compared to WAMZ zone where inflation averages a double digit. Consequently for WAMZ member countries to achieve low inflation rate, they need to enter into a monetary union. 39 Gambia, Ghana, Nigeria, and Sierra Leone speak English as their official , while Guinea speak French 40 See Frankel and Rose 103 102 Third it can be observed that the degree of openness is greater in WAEMU compared to WAMZ which is in line with the work of Frankel and Rose (1998). The average degree of openness in WAEMU zone is 73 percent compared to 61 percent in WAMZ zone (see table 4). Moreover with the exception of The Gambia and Nigeria, the rest of WAMZ member countries are below average. The implication is that currency union enhances openness and openness increases trade and income (see Frankel and Rose (1998, 2002)). This implies that for WAMZ member countries to reap the benefits of trade, they need to enter into a monetary union. Finally, the co-movement result shows that both WAMZ and WAEMU tend to have the same average co-movement in Gross Domestic Product and terms of trade. The intuition is, the two zones have similar economies and face similar economic shocks. However, WAEMU tend to have greater co-movement in inflation compared to WAMZ zone. The implication is, there is a single central bank in WAEMU zone that conducts monetary policy. Belonging to a monetary union also enforces fiscal discipline and enforces inflation control to a single digit. With the exception of inflation, there appear to be a greater comovement in WAMZ zone compared to WAEMU. The intuition is that WAMZ zone economies tend to be more synchronized and entering into monetary union enhances the zone’s tendency towards satisfying OCA criteria. The result is in line with the endogeneity of the Optimum Currency Area (see Frankel and Rose (1998)). Even though these countries are yet to enter in a monetary union, WAMZ member countries have made some progress in meeting the required criteria. As a result, the following observations need to be highlighted which may provide some insights to policy makers, researchers, and politicians. Since 2007 all WAMZ member countries have shown a single digit rate of inflation. As at 2009 inflation rate in the Gambia, Ghana, Guinea, Nigeria and Sierra Leone stood at 3.0, 5.8, 3.5, 4.2, and 4.0 percent respectively. In addition these figures show a downward trend since 2005 and with the exception of Ghana, all member countries have met the inflation criterion. Similarly the fiscal criteria debt-to-GDP show similar trend. All countries have shown a declined in their debt-to-GDP ratio. As at 2009 the debt-to-GDP ratio for Gambia, Ghana, Guinea, Nigeria, and Sierra Leone stood at 92.5, 50.6, 48.2, 28.7 and 60.6 percent respectively. Gambia being an exception, all member countries met the debt-to-GDP criterion. Taking a closer look at the average co-movement in prices, output, terms of trade, and current account, the WAMZ zone performed as high as the WAEMU zone. The intuition is that the zone faces similar kind of economic shocks. This reduces the cost of losing independent monetary policy and facilitates monetary union formation. The implication is that policy makers in member countries have shown some amount of commitment in the formulation of a monetary union. Consequently, politicians need to be more involved so as to demonstrate some degree of political will. The implication is that once there is a political 103 104 will, monetary union can kick-start without all members meeting all the required criteria 41. Once there is political will among member-countries, the zone might benefit from the union through the effects it has in enhancing trade and GDP per capita. Table 1: Mean Annual Inflation in ECOWAS ZONE in percent 1980-2005 Countries ranked in descending order Average Sierra Leone Guinea -Bissau Ghana Nigeria Guinea Liberia* Gambia Cape Verde Cote d’Ivoire Togo Senegal Benin Niger Burkina Faso Mali 42.97 38.85 34.06 22.92 16.62 16.26 10.74 7.41 5.18 4.83 4.68 4.51 3.91 3.49 3.42 *Data for Liberia limited so I considered only 10 periods which are available 41 According to 1996 European Union report, only Germany, Luxemburg, and United Kingdom were forecast to fulfill both deficit and debt criteria. Eight members show debt-to-GDP ratio rising. 104 105 Table 2: Inflation Rate Variability in percent within ECOWAS Zone 1980-2005 Countries with High Inflation variability (Ranked by Standard Deviation of Inflation) Standard Deviation Inflation 41.24 33.18 27.68 18.87 18.76 10.21 8.80 8.22 7.89 7.68 7.54 6.30 5.77 5.21 Sierra Leone Guinea-Bissau Ghana Nigeria Guinea Gambia Niger Togo Benin Mali Senegal Cape Verde Burkina Faso Cote d’Ivoire Table 3: Fiscal deficit criterion as of 2005 (Percent of GDP) Country Budget Deficit (Limit = 5 percent) Public Debt (Limit = 60 percent) Gambia 10.6 114.7 Ghana 1.3* 72.7 Guinea 4.1* 84.7 Nigeria 7.8 33.3* Sierra Leone 9.3 54.6* Source: WAMI and author’s calculations Note: * denotes satisfactory 106 105 Table 4: Average openness in WAMZ zone (percent), 1980-2005 High Trade-Ratio Countries Percentage Gambia Nigeria Ghana Guinea Sierra Leone WAMZ WAEMU 108.30% 76.38% 55.60% 53.89% 46.35% 61.00% 73.10% Table 5.1a: GDP Co-movement in WAMZ zone Country Gambia Ghana Guinea Ghana 0.028 Guinea 0.031 0.023 Nigeria 0.030 0.038 0.036 Sierra Leone 0.095 0.084 0.077 Average real GDP co-movement in WAMZ zone is 0.053 106 107 Nigeria 0.092 Table 5.1b: GDP Co-movement WAEMU zone Country Benin BurkinaCote GuineaFaso d’Ivoire Bissau Burkina0.026 Faso Cote 0.038 0.047 d’Ivoire Guinea0.093 0.097 0.092 Bissau Mali 0.040 0.030 0.067 0.113 Mali Niger Niger 0.040 0.032 0.042 0.105 0.050 Senegal 0.023 0.027 0.037 0.093 0.046 0.035 Togo 0.060 0.057 0.053 0.091 0.073 0.052 Senegal 0.052 Average GDP Co-movement within WAEMU zone is 0.058 Table 5.2a: Terms of trade Co-movement in WAMZ Country Gambia Ghana Guinea Ghana 0.172 Guinea 0.020 0.167 Nigeria 0.317 0.283 0.250 Sierra Leone 0.156 0.114 0.112 Average real Terms of trade co-movement in WAMZ is 0.202 107 108 Nigeria 0.248 Table 5.2b: Terms of trade Co-movement in WAEMU Country Benin BurkinaCote GuineaFaso d’Ivoire Bissau Burkina0.138 Faso Cote 0.199 0.143 d’Ivoire Guinea0.213 0.181 0.199 Bissau Mali 0.137 0.090 0.156 0.199 Mali Niger Niger 0.217 0.126 0.152 0.164 0.153 Senegal 0.166 0.109 0.128 0.146 0.110 0.124 Togo 0.138 0.131 0.146 0.179 0.105 0.145 Senega l 0.112 Average terms of trade Co-movement within WAEMU is 0.150 Table 5.3a: Inflation Co-movement in WAMZ Country Gambia Ghana Guinea Ghana 0.946 Guinea 0.718 0.813 Nigeria 1.149 0.792 0.823 Sierra Leone 0.816 1.003 0.801 Inflation Co-movement in WAMZ zone is 0.887 108 109 Nigeria 1.006 Table 5.3b: Inflation Co-movement in WAEMU zone Country Beni Burkina Cote Guinean -Faso d’Ivoire Bissau Burkina-Faso 0.358 Mali Niger Cote d’Ivoire 0.766 0.389 Guinea-Bissau 1.657 1.298 1.425 Mali 0.700 0.672 0.439 1.129 Niger 0.736 0.564 0.673 1.322 0.734 Senegal 0.972 1.250 0.673 1.387 1.634 1.646 Togo 0.883 0.888 1.110 1.818 0.934 1.044 Senegal 1.050 Average Inflation Co-movement within WAEMU zone is 1.005 Table 5.4a: Current Account Co-movement WAMZ zone Country Gambia Ghana Guinea Ghana 1.26 Guinea 1.27 1.09 Nigeria 1.16 1.24 1.1 Sierra Leone 1.02 1.26 1.1 Average current account co-movement in WAMZ zone is 1.15 109 110 Nigeria 0.97 Table 5.4b: Current Account Co-movement in WAEMU zone Country Beni BurkinaCote GuineaMali n Faso d’Ivoire Bissau Burkina-Faso 0.52 Cote d’Ivoire 0.72 0.92 Guinea0.95 1.03 0.85 Bissau Mali 0.55 0.65 0.84 0.83 Niger 0.81 0.72 1.17 1.17 0.67 Senegal 0.47 0.69 0.53 0.7 0.47 Togo 0.44 0.57 0.77 0.93 0.42 Niger 0.88 0.66 Average current Account Co-movement within WAEMU zone is 0.73 Figure 1: Interest Rate in the WAMZ Source: IFS (2006), WAMI (various Reports) Figure 2: Exchange rate vis-à-vis US dollar and WAMZ member countries Source: IFS (2006), WAMI (various Reports) 110 111 Seneg al 0.51 REFERENCES Alesina, A. and Barro, R. 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