@jaja
Bonjour Jaja et merci pour votre commentaire.
Pour le CFA la situation « est ce qu’elle est » On en reparlera bientôt.
Quel est votre avis sur la pénétration et l’usage du Yuan RenMinbi comme monnaie de réserve ou deuxième monnaie dans plusieurs pays africains ?
Quid de la Chinafrique après la Françafrique ?
Un avis sur la présence et la coopération militaires de la Chine en Afrique ?
http://www.thedrive.com/the-war-zone/12482/heres-what-you-should-know-about-chinas-new-african-base
http://www.africanaerospace.aero/sudan-s-chinese-jet-milestone.html
Bien à vous, Renaud Bouchard
cf. ci-après :
Chinese currency renminbi (otherwise known as yuan) is becoming increasingly popular in South Africa. SWIFT (provider of secure messaging services) found that renminbi usage in South African payments has increased by 65 percent over the last 12 months, and 112 percent in the last two years.
“South Africa has experienced a major shift in renminbi growth over the last two years, strengthening the country’s trade relations with China and Hong Kong,” says Harry Newman, Head of Banking, SWIFT.
Is renminbi rising across the continent ? We take a look :
AngolaIn August 2015, China and Angola signed an agreement allowing reciprocity in the use of the currencies in both countries. Yuan is now Angola’s second legal tender.
NigeriaThe Nigerian central bank has 10 percent of its foreign reserves in the Chinese currency. In April this year, Nigeria and China reached a currency swap agreement. “It means that the renminbi (yuan) is free to flow among different banks in Nigeria, and the renminbi has been included in the foreign exchange reserves of Nigeria,” Lin Songtian, Director General of the African Affairs Department of China’s foreign ministry said.
TanzaniaThe East African country has invested parts of its reserves in renminbi, joining Nigeria and Angola in pioneering the move into ‘dim sum bonds’.
ZimbabweIn January this year, Zimbabwe adopted renminbi as legal tender. According to Finance Minister Patrick Chinamasa, use of yuan “will be a function of trade between China and Zimbabwe and acceptability with customers in Zimbabwe”.
GhanaThe West African country has also integrated renminbi into its financial market. The country allowed its banks to quote yuan rates and sell the Chinese currency in 2014.
MauritiusIn 2011, HSBC Mauritius began offering customers the option to open bank accounts in renminbi. Since then, the country has seen a growing demand for the Chinese currency.
ZambiaIn 2011, the Lusaka branch of the Bank of China became the first in Africa to offer yuan banking services. Last year, The People’s Bank of China signed a memorandum of understanding on yuan clearing with Zambia’s central banks.
Kenya Kenya hosts a clearinghouse that enables investors and traders to conduct transactions between Kenyan shilling and yuan, without going through the US dollar first. In 2016, Kenya’s CFC Stanbic Bank became the first bank in the country to use renminbi at its branches.Source : http://www.africanbusinessreview.co.za/finance/2534/The-rise-of-renminbi-yuan-across-Africa
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