Showing posts with label frank ofei. Show all posts
Showing posts with label frank ofei. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 27, 2016

COMING UP!>>Ep.83 -- Season 4 FINALE: Demystifying the Ecowas Treaty(revd) of 1993 with ex-ECOWAS Frank Ofei

Episode #83
(Season 4; Ep.18):  
Demystifying the Ecowas Treaty(revd) of 1993 with ex-ECOWAS Frank Ofei

Season 4 is STILL on the theme of “making money for Africa”.

In the third edition for the month of July, we want to use the 23rd anniversary of the revised ECOWAS treaty of 1993 on 24 July to remind listeners about how far West Africa has gone in consolidating its integration.

It is arguable that, the Treaty is the closest the sub-region has come to a constitution for West Africa.

If that is true, then what does that say about the aspirations of ECOWAS to create a West African civil service that can adequately-cater to citizens of West Africa?

In this edition, we want to help Mr.Ofei unpack  and demystify the ECOWAS Charter.

Who better than the person who has intimate knowledge of what is considered by former UN Economic Commission for Africa Professor Jeghan Senghor as the "bible" for West Africa's integration.
         
Join us if you can at 14h05 on Wednesday 27 July, 2016


Call us on the following number
+233(302)777.173
Guiding questions
  • How relevant is the Ecowas Treaty of 1993 in the 21st century?
  • Does it still respond to the realities of the time in West Africa?
  • How does it speak to West Africa's integration?

Guest in the studio
 Mr. Frank Ofei,  former ECOWAS staff

***********************
*more details will be available soon on www.africainfocusradioshow.org ; africainfocusshow.blogspot.com.

*Follow the conversations on #AfricainFocus on twitter: http://www.twitter.com/africainfocus14.

*Tweet Emmanuel ahead of time on www.twitter.com/ekbensah, using #africainfocus.

*Follow 24/7 on https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.radioxyzonline.pc

Call Radio XYZ93.1FM on +233(302)777.173


Wednesday, February 3, 2016

"The ECOWAS Common External Tariff is necessary because it is helping us as a body to have a fair due for our producers...” – former ECOWAS Staff



Episode #60:
“The ECOWAS Common External Tariff is necessary because it is helping us as a body to have a fair due for our producers...” – former ECOWAS Staff

AFRICA IN FOCUS SHOW

ACCRA, Ghana – Independent Economic Consultant Frank Ofei believes the Common External Tariff (CET) that Ghana has begun implementing on 1 February “is to prepare us to be competing on even ground.” He contends “the CET is a good instrument, but like every instrument, it is how we position ourselves on how to use it.”

Speaking to host E.K.Bensah Jr on the “Africa in Focus” Show, Ofei, who is a former ECOWAS Staff with nineteen years as a Director of Economic Policy at the-then ECOWAS Secretariat, explained that his take-home message is “everybody who wants to comment on it...should put it in proper context. If you take certain products, you must know what the rates were before the CET; what rates there are now, and the reason behind the change – if there is any change.” He continues “from there, you can protest, comment and make suggestions. The thing is that the CET has been adopted, but if it is realised that it is doing more harm...than good, then the country has a duty to back to ECOWAS and say ‘this is not working right... for the long-term development of the region as a whole.’”

He believes “this kind of analysis and feedback” of the Common External Tariff “needs to be done.”
According to Ofei the CET “is saying that all the ECOWAS are adopting the same rates of customs duties for goods imported into the country. Before the adoption of this, each country had its own rate, with some of them having four bands.” He says that some even had as many as fifteen bands. The idea is for all States to adhere to a categorisation of bands. “There is a negotiation of what products go into particular groups under what particular rate.” ECOWAS inherited the UEMOA rates of 0, 5 and 20 percent. They would eventually add a fifth band, which was fixed at 35 percent. This covers sensitive products. 

The second important issue that comes up, Ofei maintains, is that the CET is not just a customs duty to raise revenue. He adds “It is a policy instrument for encouraging production, for protecting health, defence and security.”
The host spent the better part of the show discussing with Ofei aspects of ECOWAS’ integration, including the regional significance of the CET; the ECOWAS Biometric ID Card and the future of Guinea-Bissau.
Ofei expressed surprise at the fact that an impoverished and fairly-illiterate country like Niger would be the country where the Biometric ID Cards would be launched by the International Organisation for Migration.

Pressed by the host to elaborate on Guinea-Bissau which Bensah described as “the black sheep of ECOWAS”, Ofei clarified that “recently, there was an ECOWAS package to move the country to a more viable state of affairs, but wouldn’t want to label GB a “black sheep”, because the policy in ECOWAS is that every country has its own challenges, and so what it does is look at what each country brings on board positively.” He went on “a number of initiatives have been started for Guinea-Bissau, and similar things were done for Cote d‘Ivoire.” He contends “at various levels, ECOWAS has country-specific measures to address issues”, such as Special Representative. He agrees there must be “focus at the regional level on how to bring GB out of problems looking at specific issues that can be better-addressed at the regional level.”


ENDs
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The “Africa in Focus” Show is hosted by Emmanuel.K.Bensah Jr from 14h00 to 15h00 every Wednesday. You can download all podcasts from www.africainfocusradioshow.org. Follow the conversation on twitter on @africainfocus14, using #africainfocus



Tuesday, February 2, 2016

COMING UP!> Ep.60 of "Africa in Focus" Show on 3 February, 2016: Time with Former ECOWAS Staff Frank Ofei

Episode #60:
Time with…former ECOWAS Staff Frank Ofei


For the sixtieth edition of AIF, we want to reprise a conversation with former ECOWAS Official Frank Ofei, who was in no mean part responsible for the revision of the 1993 ECOWAS Treaty.

Last time we spoke with Mr.Ofei was in July 2015 in ep.43.

Much has happened since: ECOWAS has celebrated forty years of its existence, and only two days ago on 1 February, Ghana joined ECOWAS member States to implement the ECOWAS Common External Tariff. This is undoubtedly an important step in ECOWAS’ plans to integrate States economically.

Economists believe there are five finite steps to the establishment of an economic union. These are: Free Trade; Customs Union; Common Market; Economic Union; and Political Union.

That ECOWAS has embarked on this ambitious step of a CET gives vent to the idea that an ECOWAS of the people may just be in course.

Who better to tell us than the ECOWAS insider who was an ECOWAS Director for almost two decades at the then-Secretariat before it was transformed into a Commission in 2007: Mr.Frank Ofei.

E.K.Bensah will be spending the afternoon speaking with him.

Call us on the following numbers
+233(0)289.000.931 

Join us if you can at 2.05pm on 3 February, 2015.

Guiding questions
  • · What is significance of ECOWAS Common External Tariff on Ghana' s economy?
  • ·   What is regional significance of CET?
  • ·    In light of Burkina Faso attack in January by Islamist terrorists, is Ecowas condemned to direct integration efforts towards peace and security/terrorism?
  • ·  How feasible is the ECOWAS Biometric ID Card, and how will it aid integration?
  • ·    Guinea-Bissau is the weakest link in Ecowas. What does 2016 look for her?


Guests in the studio:
Ø  Frank Ofei, Independent Economic Consultant/retired ECOWAS Director at ECOWAS Commission

***********************
more details will be available soon on www.africainfocusradioshow.org ; africainfocusshow.blogspot.com


Wednesday, July 29, 2015

PODCAST:>>Ep.43: SPECIAL: Talking Points around #ECOWAS@40(4): One-on-one with former ECOWAS Official Frank Ofei

EPISODE #43
Research & Co-ordination: E.K.Bensah Jr
Executive Producer: E.K.Bensah Jr
Technical  Producer: D.J. Stagger

Dear friends, 

In ep.43 of #AfricainFocusShow, we did something a little different around the "Talking Points around #Ecowas@40.

We had a one-on-one with former Ecowas official Frank Ofei on aspects of Ecowas' integration, which was timely as the 47th Ordinary Session of Ecowas was underway here in Accra.

 It was also timely because Ecowas turned 40 on 28 May!

 The difference for 19 May's edition was that, given how some of us have been studying and monitoring Ecowas for a decade-plus, & calling for it to be more accountable to the average ECOWAS Community citizen, it was important to also include a small appreciation of the theory of regional integration so listeners appreciate how powerful this Ecowas bloc is when pitted against the larger global context.
ECOWAS obviously turned 40 on 28 May, but what does ECOWAS need to quickly do over the next ten years to ensure it remains relevant and meaningful for its citizens?

We also used the show to briefly touch on how ECOWAS sits in the grand scheme of regional integration theories, such as neo-functionalism, which sees member states of a grouping cooperating; collaborating on specific projects (such as Liberian intervention by Nigerian-led ECOMOG in 1989) to such an extent that it spills over to cooperating on other projects in the furtherance of integration.

To speak to these, and many more questions, we had a very important discussion with former ECOWAS official Frank Ofei.

Guiding questions
  • ·        There’s a crisis brewing in Burundi. In the absence of a Peace & Security Architecture comparable to ECOWAS’ what lessons can that region learn from ECOWAS to inform how they manage the crisis?
  • ·        ECOWAS’ free movement has meant that more than 70pct of the migrants have originated from the sub-region. How has ECOWAS been actively seized on the migrant crisis, given its collaboration with Spain since 2008?
  • ·        How have #ECOWAS40 celebrations been so far throughout the sub-region, and what is your assessment of how other ECOWAS Day celebrations have been? How, for example, was #ECOWAS30 celebrations?
  • ·        What are some of the economic integration-related issues we need to look out for from the ECOWAS Summit underway?
  • ·        Is it not time for the revised 1993 ECOWAS Treaty to be revised to reflect realities; structures; and institutions of 2015?
Kindly find a link to download the podcast below, and enjoy "Africa in Focus" Show's episode#43:

https://www.dropbox.com/s/ycdjikgm5hbb16l/AFRICAN%20IN%20FOCUS%2019-05-2015.mp3?dl=0

Just in case you missed it: "Africa in Focus Show" is the ONLY weekly magazine on Ghanaian radio explaining; unpacking; demystifying ECOWAS; AU; and South-South cooperation policies around Africa's integration. We are airborne every Tuesday from 13h00 to 15h00 GMT. All podcasts are available for download on www.africainfocusradioshow.org  Follow the conversation using #AfricainFocus


Kind regards,

Emmanuel


www.africainfocusradioshow.org
www.twitter.com/africainfocus14
www.twitter.com/eastafricarisng

Sunday, February 8, 2015

#PODCAST>>EPISODE#30: Talking Points around Ecowas@40 (1)

EPISODE #30
Research & Co-ordination: E.K.Bensah Jr
Executive Producer: E.K.Bensah Jr

LINK: https://www.dropbox.com/s/gu63urn2bsdc0bg/AFRICA%20IN%20FOCUS%20%2003-02-15.mp3?dl=0

"Dear friends,

Please find below a link to the podcast of the full edition of 3 February edition of "Africa in Focus".

We spoke to three experts on aspects of West African integration to offer us a flavour of what we needed to be having conversations as we walk down the road to the fortieth anniversary of ECOWAS.

To that end, we spoke to TWN-Africa’s Sylvester Bagooro who spoke to the issue of economic integration.

As the AU’s Peace and Security Council endorsed a deal to support the Lake Chad Basin Commission countries of Cameroon; Chad; Nigeria; Niger and Benin to form a Multinational Joint Task Force (MNJTF) to rout and combat Boko Haram, we spoke  to WANEP’s Alimou Diallo on the actual composition of the force, and what the sub-region should expect to see around ECOWAS’ peace and security efforts in 2015.

We briefly spoke to a retired ECOWAS Official Frank Ofei, instrumental for the revision of 1993 ECOWAS Treaty, to give us his expert views on what we really need to look out for around ECOWAS’s integration efforts – beyond peace and security. What are its successes, it failures; its potential to help uplift the sub-region to a prosperous West Africa?

Finally, we interviewed AU Commission Official Komla Bissi to offer us an insight into what is considered one of the AU’s most successful programmes – the Comprehensive Africa Agriculture Development Programme, which enjoins Member States dedicate 10 percent of their budget to agriculture.

Kindly find the link to the podcast of #AfricainFocus show on Tuesday 3 February, 2015.

We look forward to comments!

In solidarity!"
Emmanuel""

Monday, February 2, 2015

Coming Up on 30th Edition: >> Talking points around Ecowas@40(1)

30th Edition:  
Talking points around Ecowas@40(1)


We want to use the thirtieth edition of the Africa in Focus show to commence talking points around ECOWAS as it heads towards the celebration of its 40th anniversary

We will therefore be speaking to people who can help us offer a serious reflection on what Ecowas Community citizens ought to be thinking about as they equally reflect on how far ECOWAS has come.
To that end, we will speak to TWN-Africa’s Sylvester Bagooro who will speak to the issue of economic integration. That organisation’s efforts to stop Ghana signing the Economic Partnership Agreements may have fallen on deaf ears to the ECOWAS Chair, but efforts to stop its ratification are underway. As ECOWAS Member States enter 2015 with optimism that the Common External Tariff will inure to the benefit of the sub-region’s attempt at a Common Market, what are some of the challenges and red herrings the sub-region needs to look out for? 

As the AU’s Peace and Security Council endorsed a deal to support the Lake Chad Basin Commission countries of Cameroon; Chad; Nigeria; Niger and Benin to form a Multinational Joint Task Force (MNJTF) to rout and combat Boko Haram, we will be speaking to WANEP’s Alimou Diallo on the actual composition of the force, and what the sub-region should expect to see around ECOWAS’ peace and security efforts in 2015.

We shall thereafter speak to a retired ECOWAS Official Frank Ofei, instrumental for the revision of 1993 ECOWAS Treaty, to give us his expert views on what we really need to look out for around ECOWAS’s integration efforts – beyond peace and security. What are its successes, it failures; its potential to help uplift the sub-region to a prosperous West Africa?

Finally, we will speak to AU Commission Official Komla Bissi to offer us an insight into what is considered one of the AU’s most successful programmes – the Comprehensive Africa Agriculture Development Programme, which enjoins Member States dedicate 10 percent of their budget to agriculture. What are NEPAD Planning Commission Agency & the AU’s next steps for CAADP’s implementation?

Join us if you can at 1pm on 3 February, 2015.

Guests in the studio: 
Sylvester Bagooro, Programme Officer, Political Economy Unit, Third World Network-Africa


On the line:
Frank Ofei, retired Ecowas Official @13h20 
Alimou Diallo, West Africa Network on Peacebuilding(WANEP) @13h40
Komla Bissi, Senior Adviser, Comprehensive Africa Agriculture Development Programme(CAADP), African Union Commission @14h15
Kobby BlayEbolaWatch @14h40

Monday, January 19, 2015

Coming Up on 29th Edition: >> Talking points around Ecowas@40(1)

29th Edition:  
Perspective Retrospective 2: Review of the Year 2014 – Health, & Tourism


We are reprising the issue of review in the 29th edition of AIF.

We will, once again, be speaking to people who can help us offer a retrospective of the year on some of the biggest stories AIF show covered. Apart from aviation, the second biggest was Tourism, and Ebola. But we also want to pitch the issue of Ebola against that of AIDS, which may have gone under-reported because of the very-existential threat of Ebola.

If you will recall, health, especially that of Ebola, was a major talking point on AIF as Radio XYZ blazed the trail back in August 2014 on regular weekly discussions of Ebola under Africa in Focus.
Join us if you can at 1pm on 20 January, 2015.

Guests in the studio:
Ø  Penelope Agbai , Communications Officer, West Africa Aids Foundation
Ø  Kobby Blay, EbolaWatch


On the line:
·         Dr.Boakye, Director – Tourism Research Advocacy Centre(TRAC) @13h25 for our “Africa in the News” segment

·         Jesse Kawra, former Miss Ghana Tourism 2013 @13h40 for our “Africa in the News” segment

Thursday, September 11, 2014

At Africa in Focus' First-ever Public Forum, Former ECOWAS Official Frank Ofei Speaks about Ecowas Common Currency


At Africa in Focus' First-ever Public Forum, Former ECOWAS Official Frank Ofei Speaks about ECOWAS Common Currency

Published on Thursday, 11 September 2014 06:10

By Isaac AIDOO

The effort to reach a common currency for West African states will remain elusive if governments continue to bask in fiscal indiscipline and fail to adhere to the dictates of any roadmap agreed upon.

With the structural weakening of the European monetary union at the root of Europe’s economic depression, the viability or otherwise of a single monetary union in West Africa has returned to the front burner.

Experts on monetary integration say the achievement of the eco can only be feasible if member countries are disciplined enough to pursue measures that fall in tandem with the region’s criteria for convergence.

Mr Frank Ofei,  a former  ECOWAS official who was instrumental in the revision of the ECOWAS Treaty in 1975 stresses on fiscal and monetary discipline by leaders of the member states if monetary union is to see the light of day.

At a two-day public forum on Regional Development in West Africa organised in Accra last week, Mr Ofei told participants that leaders of ECOWAS were failing to see and exploit the numerous opportunities in the West African market.

According to Mr Ofei, “achieving a single currency is feasible if we have the discipline but we don’t have the discipline. With the slippages we are experiencing in Ghana , we need to be asking ourselves what is happening to us and how do we surmount the challenges ; It’s not just a matter of bemoaning the fact that inflation is rising; we should ask ourselves what causes the inflation; what can we do about productivity to stem the rising inflation.”

On the score of the member countries inability to meet all the convergence criteria, Heads of States of West Africa Monetary Zone have recently set 2020 as the new deadline to attain one currency.

Mr Ofei pointed out that “it is not just about going to take a decision that we are setting 2020 as a new target  when you get back you don’t take the necessary steps to achieve that. If there is a roadmap that has come along with it, you must stick to it and make sure your policies are in line with that.”

He wonders whether there will ever be a time that governments will formulate policies that have a bearing on some of the commitments made at the ECOWAS forum.

“Every country is supposed to have a multi- year convergence programme so when the shift in deadline was made to from 2005 to 2009 each of the WAMZ countries was supposed to have drawn up a convergence programme covering that period to achieve the set target,” he submits.

Mr  Ofei  adds “You take where you are, where you are supposed to be, plot your path and policies that go with it to achieve that but none of the members has done that  so if you haven’t done it let alone implement it then the deadline will keep shifting.”

Since 2000, six ECOWAS nations have been planning to introduce a common currency, known as the eco, in a new monetary union, the West African Monetary Zone (WAMZ). The long-term strategy is for the CFA to eventually merge with the eco and transform into the region’s only currency.

The body set up to make the technical preparations for the transition, known as the West African Monetary Institute (WAMI), has postponed this implementation several times.

WAMI has been unable to carry out because most WAMZ members have failed to achieve the prescribed economic indicators needed for the smooth take-off of the common currency: single-digit inflation, central bank financing of government deficit of less than 10% of the previous year’s revenue, a government budget deficit of no more than 4% of GDP, and enough foreign exchange reserves to cover three months of imports.

As of June last year, only Nigeria was close to reaching the required goals. Ghana is doing particularly badly: battling a double digit fiscal deficit, double-digit inflation as well as other domestic and external headwinds.

Other WAMZ members have had similarly inconsistent records.

Experts are of the view that the  European crisis holds lessons for Africa. Although the EU is an imperfect political union and has a monetary union coordinated by the European Central Bank, it does not have fiscal union.

European countries still control their budgets and spending. Without this fiscal alliance, the EU was unable to overcome “asymmetric shocks”, where some unproductive countries, such as Greece, suffered downturns and needed fiscal help while others did not. It was difficult to discipline members who breached the pact.
“We are really learning from the euro crisis,” said John H. Tei Kitcher, WAMI’s acting director-general.

“One lesson that stands tall is the need for individual countries aspiring to join monetary unions to be fiscally disciplined, transparent with their economic data with their peers and committed to converging to the agreed criteria,” he noted.

Fiscal discipline will help member countries to meet the convergence criteria and buffer them against potential shocks that could result from belonging to a monetary union. Such discipline requires a strong political commitment from member countries.

ECOWAS’s seven former French colonies use the CFA (for Communauté FinancièreAfricaine) franc as their common currency. These French-speaking nations—Benin, Burkina Faso, Côte d’Ivoire, Mali, Niger, Senegal and Togo—together form the West African Economic and Monetary Union (UEMOA).

On the other hand, the five English-speaking countries—Gambia, Ghana, Liberia, Nigeria and Sierra Leone—each use their own legal tender however.

Members of UEMOA and the CFA countries are also not meeting their targets but they still run a single currency.

An  expert on monetary union finds it interesting that CFA countries despite their inability to meet their targets have been able to achieve monetary union.

 “Even though they are not meeting their targets their deviation from those targets aren’t as wide as what we have in English speaking West Africa,” he stated. More importantly though they are able to get away with it because the CFA franc is effectively underwritten by France, which is why its value is tied to the Euro, the currency zone to which France belongs.

 “The challenge is whether we can individually as countries move towards a stable enough level of macro-economic performance in terms of monitoring of fiscal policies

The currency divide has long been one of ECOWAS’s major stumbling blocks.

Civil society groups, apparently distraught with the shifting of goal posts have challenged ECOWAS leaders to match their words with actions and ensure the implementation to the letter of Protocols signed to promote integration in the sub region.

Convener of a recent summit organised by EcoAxis Integration West African Limited, Shola Oshunkeye, maintains that the protocols on movement of persons, goods and the right to residency have been partially observed but largely exist only on paper.

 “If we want to achieve the kind of integration that member states of the European Union gleefully talk about today, the protocols will have to be revisited and the leaders of ECOWAS countries in the sub-region must walk the talk,” he said in an interview.

In spite of ratifying the protocol which ushered in the free movement of persons in the sub-region impeded by the colonial powers, several border checks continue to exist, some of them unauthorised.

This has resulted in severe harassment and extortion of money from travellers by security personnel at the numerous checkpoints.

 Free movement is also hampered by different official languages at border posts coupled with reports of torture and killings by security personnel in countries like Senegal and Gambia.


Ends
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