By REUTERS
KAMPALA
— The leaders of five East African countries signed a protocol on Saturday
laying the groundwork for a monetary union within 10 years that they expect
will expand regional trade.
Heads
of state of Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda, Rwanda and Burundi, which have already
signed a common market and a single customs union, say the protocol will allow
them to progressively converge their currencies and increase commerce.
In
the run-up to achieving a common currency, the East African Community (EAC)
nations aim to harmonize monetary and fiscal policies and establish a common
central bank. Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania and Rwanda already present their budgets
simultaneously every June.
The
plan by the region of about 135 million people, a new frontier for oil and gas exploration,
is also meant to draw foreign investment and wean EAC countries off external
aid.
"The
promise of economic development and prosperity hinges on our integration,"
said Kenya's President Uhuru Kenyatta.
"Businesses
will find more freedom to trade and invest more widely, and foreign investors
will find additional, irresistible reasons to pitch tent in our region,"
said Kenyatta, leader of the biggest economy in east Africa.
Kenyatta,
who is due to face trial at the International Criminal Court on crimes against
humanity charges in February, took over the chairmanship of the bloc from
Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni, hosting the summit.
Kenya
has launched a $13.8 billion Chinese-built railway that aims to cut transport
costs, part of regional plans that also include building new ports and
railways.
Landlocked
Uganda and Kenya have discovered oil, while Tanzania has vast natural gas
reserves, which require improved infrastructure and foreign investment so they
can be exploited.
Tanzania,
where the bloc's secretariat is based, has complained that it has been
sidelined in discussions to plan these projects, but Kenyatta said the EAC was
still united.
Kenneth
Kitariko, chief executive officer at African Alliance Uganda, an investment
advisory firm, said the monetary union would boost efficiency in the region's
economy estimated at about $85 billion in combined gross domestic product.
"In
a monetary union, the absence of currency risk provides a greater incentive to
trade," he said.
Kitariko
said, however, that achieving a successful monetary union would require
convergence of the union's economies, hinting that some challenges lay ahead.
"Adjusting
to a single monetary and exchange rate policy is an inescapable feature of
monetary union ... but this will take time and may be painful for some,"
he said, referring to the fact that some countries may struggle to meet agreed
benchmarks.
(Writing
by James Macharia; Editing by Alistair Lyon)

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