
The 15 member group announced at the end of an ECOWAS summit in Abuja, Nigeria’s capital on Saturday.
Six member countries, including Nigeria, Liberia, and Ghana, could be swapping their currencies for a new one – the ECO.
Eight ECOWAS countries (Benin, Burkina Faso, Guinea-Bissau, Ivory Coast, Mali, Niger, Senegal, and Togo) currently jointly use the CFA franc.

If implemented, countries across the region will be able to move and spend money across different countries without worrying about exchange rate costs says economic analyst, Tokunbo Afikuyomi.
“The single currency if properly implemented will improve trade by allowing specific countries to specialize at what they are good at, and exchange it for other goods that other countries in the bloc produce more efficiently,” he told CNN.
But despite these possible benefits, analysts remain worried about the lack of integration policies among member countries in the region.
According to Afikuyomi, a single currency will only work if all the countries involved are economically aligned, which is not the current case.
“The Guinean economy, for example, has a GDP of around $7 billion, that’s less than Nigeria’s 13th largest state, Abia with $8.7 billion. This difference in economies already makes a sensible uniform policy like the trade currency very difficult,” he said.