Africa – ECOWAS: ECO, West Africa’s single currency, announced for 2027
The Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) has just reached a major milestone in its monetary integration project. After more than twenty years of delays, the launch of the single currency, the ECO, is now officially scheduled for 2027. It was in Banjul, The Gambia, that ECOWAS Commission President Omar Alieu Touray confirmed this historic timeline, marking the transition from political will to concrete action.
This progress is marked by a new strategic approach: abandoning the requirement for all member states to simultaneously meet uniform convergence criteria. From now on, countries that are ready will move forward together, while others will receive support to align their reforms. This pragmatic flexibility may be the key to overcoming recurring obstacles caused by regional economic and fiscal disparities.
The introduction of the ECO is more than just a monetary change—it is a structural lever to strengthen regional economic integration, facilitate intra-community trade, and reduce dependence on foreign currencies. For West African economies, it presents an opportunity to pool monetary policies, stabilize exchange rates, and establish long-sought economic sovereignty—long undermined by colonial-era monetary systems.
This ambitious project will require bold political decisions and close technical coordination, but it opens a new chapter for ECOWAS. As a symbol of economic unity, the ECO could drive more inclusive development, while giving West Africa its own monetary voice on the international stage.
