AfCFTA on pilot phase of Pan African payment, settlement system- Sec.-Gen.

The African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) Secretariat says pilot phase of the Pan African Payment and Settlement System (PAPSS) is ongoing in six West African countries to facilitate AfCFTA’s implementation. The AfCFTA Secretary-General, Mr Wamkele Mene, disclosed this to newsmen on Wednesday in Abuja while on official tour to Nigeria. Supreme reports that PAPSS […]

Update: 2021-06-23 03:08 GMT

The African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) Secretariat says pilot phase of the Pan African Payment and Settlement System (PAPSS) is ongoing in six West African countries to facilitate AfCFTA’s implementation.

The AfCFTA Secretary-General, Mr Wamkele Mene, disclosed this to newsmen on Wednesday in Abuja while on official tour to Nigeria.

Supreme reports that PAPSS is a centralised payment and settlement market infrastructure for processing, clearing and settling of intra-African trade and commerce payments.

Adopted in July 2019 by the African Union Heads of State as the payment and settlement system to support the implementation of the AfCFTA, PAPSS is expected to create new financial flows and successfully facilitate trade and other economic activities among African countries.

Afreximbank is the operator and the main Settlement Agent for PAPSS.

The Bank will provide settlement guarantee on the payment system as well as overdraft facilities to all settlement agents.

Supreme recalls that Interim Governing Council of PAPSS had in December 2020, in Cairo met on step towards operationalisation of the payment system which was developed by African Export-Import Bank (Afreximbank), under the auspices of AfCFTA Secretariat and AU.

Mene said that the system which would be ready at the end of 2021 was the first major step taken in addressing some challenges related to the cost of currency convertability under AfCFTA implementation.

“We have started a piloting phase of the Pan-African payment and settlement platform of six countries in West Africa who have switched on to the platform.

“Transactions are already happening within these six countries that are at an advanced stage of the pilot project.

“So, the platform will make a significant contribution and our estimate is that it will reduce the cost of transactions by five billion dollars annually, being the aggregate amount that is spent on currency convertibility,” he said.

Mene further explained that Africa has 42 currencies and the cost of the currency convertibility was actually a constraint to intra Africa Trade.

This, he said was making us to feel inefficient and our trade unnecessarily expensive, thereby adding to the cost of doing business especially the Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises (MSMEs).

“When the system is fully up and running, you will be able to transact with somebody in Kenya in Naira and they will receive Kenya shillings and Afreximbank will be the correspondent facility.

“We are working with them as the Secretariat but they have been very strong in investing in African solutions and this Pan-African payment system certainly in the last 60 years, it is one of the most significant achievements.

“We are not going to have a common currency overnight in Africa, we are still going to grapple with this issue of different currencies.

“But with the payment and settlement system we have taken the first major step in addressing some of the challenges that are related to the cost of currency,” he noted.

According to him, he is encouraged by the way the six piloting countries are understanding the importance of the system to African economy.

The interim PAPSS Governing Council is comprised of Central Bank Governors of the six countries of the West African Monetary Zone (WAMZ) for pilot phase of PAPSS, AU Commissioner for Economic Affairs, AfCFTA Secretary-General and a representative each of African Development Bank and Afreximbank.

The Council is charged with providing regulatory oversight to ensure the success of the payment system.

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