From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
African Union |
This article is part of the series:
Politics and government of
the African Union
|
|
- Institutions of the African Union
- Casablanca Group
- Union of African States
- Organisation for African Unity
- African Economic Community
- African Unification Front
- Executive
- Assembly
- Commission
- Chairman
- Conference and Events
- Peace & Sec.
- Pol. Affairs
- Infra. & Energy
- Soc. Affairs
- HR, Sci., & Tech.
- Trade and Industry
- Rural Econ. & Agri.
- Economic
- Legal Counsel
- Executive Council
- Rep. Committee
- Legislature
- Pan-African Parliament
- President
- Bureau
- Secretariat
- List of members
- Permanent Committees
- Rural Econ., Agri., Resources, Eviron.
- Monetary & Financial
- Trade, Customs, & Immigration
- Cooperation, IR, & Conflict
- Trans., Industry, Comm., Energy, Sci., & Tech.
- Health, Labour, & Social
- Educ., Culture, Tourism, & HR
- Gender, Family, Youth, Disabilities
- Justice & Rights
- Rules, Privileges, & Discipline
- Judiciary
- Sirte Declaration
- Constitutive Act of the AU
- Law
- Charter on Rights
- Court of Justice
- Court on Human and Peoples' Rights
- List of judges
- Advisory bodies
- Peace and Security Council
- Economic, Social, and Cultural Council
- Specialized Technical Committees
- Rural Econ., Agri.
- Monetary & Financial
- Trade, Customs, and Immigration
- Industry, Sci. & Tech., Energy...
- Transport, Comm., Tourism
- Health, Labor, Social
- Edu., Culture, & Human Resources
- Financial bodies
- AEC Pillars (Abuja Treaty)
- CEN-SAD
- COMESA
- EAC
- ECCAS/CEEAC
- CEMAC
- ECOWAS
- UEMOA
- WAMZ
- IGAD
- SADC
- SACU
- AMU/UMA
- African Central Bank
- African Monetary Fund
- African Investment Bank
- New Partnership for Africa's Development
- African Peer Review Mechanism
- Decentralised bodies
- Agencies of the AU
- AU-related topics
- Elections
- Enlargement
- Foreign relations
|
Other countries • Politics Portal
|
The African Central Bank (ACB) is one of the three financial institutions of the African Union. It will over time take over responsibilities of the African Monetary Fund.
The creation of the ACB, to be completed by 2028 was first agreed upon in the 1991 Abuja Treaty. The 1999 Sirte Declaration called for a speeding up of this process with creation by 2020.[1].
When it is fully implemented via Pan-African Parliament legislation, the ACB will be the sole issuer of the African Single Currency, will become the banker of the African Government, will be the banker to Africa's private and public banking institutions, will regulate and supervise the African banking industry, and will set the official interest and exchange rates; in conjunction with the African Government's administration.
[edit] References
- ^ Paul R. Masson and Heather Milkiewicz (Jul, 2003). Africa's Economic Morass--Will a Common Currency Help?. The Digital Collegian. Retrieved on 2006-04-22.