While several major economic powers still hesitate to adopt a central bank digital currency, West Africa is accelerating. Eight member countries of the UEMOA are about to take a step forward with the e-CFA. A technological revolution with geopolitical reach? In a region where the CFA franc crystallizes debates on the colonial legacy, this digital turn could well be the first step towards a reinvented monetary independence.
The BCEAO presents the e-CFA as a strategic response to the expansion of fintechs and the rise of crypto. Orange Money, Wave, or even Binance (and other platforms to buy bitcoin) already attract millions of users on the continent. To keep control, the Central Bank strikes back with its own solution: official, regulated, interoperable.
The e-CFA will be usable by card, phone, or mobile app, even offline. Objective: to also reach the unbanked, who are the majority in the region. This is a true repositioning of the institution, which seeks to regain its centrality in everyday transactions. The e-CFA promises speed, security, and inclusion. But it retains one particularity: it remains pegged to the euro. This raises strong criticism.
In an op-ed published in August 2025 , economist Adama Wade already pointed out the paradox of the e-CFA: it does not break with the inherited system, it simply digitizes its mechanisms. It modernizes dependence without offering real emancipation.
Against it, cryptocurrencies offer freedom but lack stability. The duel continues.
No more coins. No more bills. The e-CFA signals the progressive disappearance of paper money. This is a small revolution in markets, taxis, or neighborhood shops. Currency moves to all digital, and everyone is concerned.
But criticisms exist. Some voices point out the risks of increased control over transactions. Others fear increased state surveillance. Not to mention that the e-CFA is programmable: in theory, its use could be limited to certain expenses or durations.
In this mutation, West Africa must juggle between innovation and the preservation of individual freedoms. Crypto, even unstable, continues to attract those who want to flee centralized models.
One of the flagship arguments for the e-CFA is financial inclusion. But how to include without excluding? In some rural areas, access to electricity remains uncertain. Not to mention digital illiteracy affecting a large part of the population.
To succeed, the BCEAO will have to go beyond simple technical innovation. Financial education campaigns, local partnerships, applications accessible to the most vulnerable will be essential. Otherwise, this digital currency will remain an urban luxury.
Dr. Mohamed H’Midouche warns of a very real risk: if the digital divide is not anticipated, the financial inclusion promised by the e-CFA could paradoxically turn into exclusion for the most vulnerable populations.
The e-CFA opens a new era. But it’s just a beginning. Africa becomes a monetary laboratory where everything is experimented: from local stablecoin to Telegram’s ambitions, which already sees itself as the key to crypto boom on the continent . The next battle will not be fought in banks, but in the connected pockets of its citizens.