Resource-rich African nations possessing comparative advantages in minerals, agriculture, and cultural heritage paradoxically lose from a global monetary system that fall outside their control. The structure of global fiat finance, anchored by the world’s dominant reserve currencies with exorbitant privilege creates a system where African currencies are passive victims of external monetary policy.
The Primary Mechanism of
the global reserve dominance: The dominance of the global currencies dictates that
when the issuing country raises interest rates or global risk aversion spikes,
their currency strengthens, against that of the African currencies. This leads
to the unintended economic consequence where large foreign-currency inflows
from say a natural resource boom, cause a nation's currency to appreciate,
rendering its other tradable sectors (such as manufacturing and agriculture)
uncompetitive, a phenomenon commonly known as the “Dutch Disease”.
Exchange Rate Volatility
Destroys Non-Resource Competitiveness. Large resource inflows, often denominated in global
currencies, drive real exchange rate appreciation, crippling manufacturing and
agriculture. This implies that countries, despite having a comparative
advantage in resources such as high value minerals, agriculture or even natural
heritage, their ability for manufacturing to increase value of their endowments
is undermined. For example, in Zambia,
copper accounts for 70–80% of exports, and research confirms real exchange rate
appreciation is "negatively associated with manufacturing
performance". Similarly, the CEMAC region exhibits Dutch Disease
indicators across oil-exporting economies. Ghana and Côte d'Ivoire, despite having
agricultural advantages, they face currency swings that distort production
incentives.
Global reserve
currencies drive Capital Flight. African nations are obliged to hold assets dominated in
global fiat currency reserves, which exposes them to several key systemic and
economic risks including the long-term erosion of the value due to inflation,
vulnerability to geopolitical weaponization, and heavy susceptibility to interest
rate volatility[1].
The Dutch Deases deepens
the debt burden due to currency overvaluation, which shrinks tax revenues and
non-resource exports. When commodity prices fall, governments are forced to
borrow heavily in foreign currency to cover budget shortfalls, leading to
unsustainable debt levels[2].
Susceptibility of Domestic
economy to foreign shocks. The global reserve currencies influence prices for key
commodities through an inverse pricing mechanism. When the global currency is
strengthening, being the global medium of exchange, it makes the key commodity such
as oil to be more expensive for international buyers, which results in dampening
the general demand. Conversely, a weakening global currency makes oil cheaper,
stimulating demand and generally driving prices higher. However, when oil
prices rise alongside a strong global currency, importing countries face a double
hit, the key commodity costs more, and the currency to buy it gets pricier, inducing
a trick down effect of inflationary pressures domestically. Rwanda recently
projected growth slowing from 9.4% to 6.8% due to geopolitical spillovers alone.
The Path Forward: It is important that
African countries adopt gold-backed reserves, mineral-backed currencies like
the African Units of Account, or African currency dominated Payments to escape the
global fiat money dependency. Zambia's acceptance of yuan for mining taxes
signals functional diversification. Until then, Africa's comparative advantages
remain trapped with its abundant resources generating wealth for global rich,
not local prosperity.
[1] Read
the article: the
Quiet Reordering of Global Reserves That Most Investors Are Missing
[2]
Read Observer Reserch Report: Dutch
Disease: Cause of Africa’s rising external debt
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