FIASDMSpotlightOHADA Project
FIASDMSpotlightOHADA Project
FIASDMSpotlightOHADA Project
Partnership Proposal
October 2008
Summary
Recognizing that a vibrant and growing private sector is critical to economic growth, job
creation and sustained development, OHADA’s objectives include the promotion and
facilitation of business transactions, the effective resolution of commercial disputes, the
creation of legal stability and security needed to foster economic activities, in order to
promote domestic and foreign investment and achieve economic development and
integration. To that effect, each OHADA Member State agreed to abandon some degree
of sovereignty in order to establish a single, cross-border regime of uniform business
laws, immediately applicable in each Member State, without resort to the national
parliaments.
Pursuant to the OHADA Treaty, the Council of Ministers (CM) is OHADA’s highest
institution and legislative body; it adopts the laws called Uniform Acts (UAs). The
Council of Ministers operates with the assistance of the Permanent Secretariat (PS), the
administrative arm of the CM. OHADA’s other institutions that support the
implementation of its regional integration approach are the Common Court of Justice
and Arbitration, and the Regional Superior School of Magistrates.
The current eight OHADA laws cover the following areas: General Commercial Law,
Companies and Partnerships, Arbitration, Bankruptcy, Security Interests and
Mortgages, Debt Recovery and Enforcement, Contracts for the Transportation of Goods
by Road, and Corporate Accounting. All these topics are critically relevant for private
sector development.
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OHADA 16 member countries: Benin, Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Chad,
Comoros, Congo, Côte d’Ivoire, Equatorial Guinea, Gabon, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Mali Niger, Senegal,
and Togo. The Democratic Republic of Congo is in the process of becoming the 17th member country.
The OHADA laws constitute a clear progress compared to the laws that were in place
before OHADA, most of which dated from colonial times and represented a fragmented
and outdated legal environment, resulting in un-necessary uncertainty and costs to
business transactions. The OHADA laws have helped to create a more stable and
predictable investment climate in the OHADA zone. However, several studies and
surveys have found that the investment climate in the 16 countries of the OHADA zone
still requires considerable improvement. Improving the business legislation provided for
in the OHADA laws is a critical component of investment climate reform efforts and is
supported by the World Bank Group’s multi-donor Investment Climate Advisory Service
(FIAS), as further outlined below.
1. Project Objective
The current FIAS project was initiated at the request of OHADA. There is a broad
consensus within the region, the World Bank Group and the donor community that
OHADA is a critical initiative to promote private investment and private sector
development in the 16 African countries concerned. The project also enjoys broad
support of the business community in the OHADA zone.
The overall project objective is to improve the quality and effectiveness of the legal and
institutional framework created by OHADA and therefore help the 16 member countries
increase their attractiveness for domestic and foreign private investment.
The project’s regional approach is justified by the fact that the laws supersede national
legislation and are directly applicable in the 16 member states. Pursuant to the OHADA
Treaty, their adoption and amendment require the member countries’ unanimous vote.
Individual member states cannot unilaterally amend the OHADA law and, in practice, all
16 countries must be involved in the revision process and approve proposed
amendments.
2. Project Description:
More than a decade after the enactment of the first OHADA laws, this component aims
at identifying unnecessary sources of constraints and costs to businesses embedded in
the laws, and formulate amendments designed to further improve the investment
climate in the OHADA zone. This technical review is conducted by several groups of
independent local and international experts, and World Bank Group specialists. As of
September 2008, 30 experts have been recruited and the ongoing review effort, which
also includes a quality control process, will be completed by the end of 2008.
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Thereafter, the presentation and discussion of the experts’ recommended reforms will
take place during regional workshops to be organized together with the OHADA
Secretariat and other institutions. This will help ensure effective and meaningful
ownership by OHADA’s public and private sector stakeholders in order to build
consensus and support for the reform agenda at national and regional levels.
The project aims to provide capacity building support to two OHADA institutions and
one very critical legal and financial infrastructure: the Business and Collateral
Registries.
The project’s design has already included the development of several critical
partnerships with major OHADA stakeholders (such as prominent local experts and
practitioners), with several units of the World Bank Group, and with donors and partners
such as France, USAID, and OIF (International Organization of Francophone
Countries).
FIAS would like to continue building additional partnerships with other key OHADA
stakeholders, locally and internationally.
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Partnership Proposal
FIAS invites its donors and development partners to participate in and collaborate on
the development and implementation of its OHADA project whose objectives are to
improve the quality and effectiveness of the OHADA legal and institutional framework
and to help the 16 member countries augment their attractiveness to domestic and
foreign private investment. A preliminary budget is attached as Annex.
Over the past year, FIAS has provided seed funding for the project’s development,
preparation and launch phase. Going forward, FIAS is seeking support from interested
donors who would be interested in co-financing the scaling up and implementation
of this critical regional initiative.
• Partial or full funding of one or several of the activities identified in the proposal
(based on the indicative budget included in the annex); co-financing of this project
can also be achieved via a core contribution to FIAS
• Collaboration on and contribution to the technical review of the uniform acts;
• Other modalities to be discussed.
Contact Us
If you are interested in partnering with FIAS on the implementation of the OHADA
project, please contact:
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Annex - Indicative Budget (amounts in USD)
The budget below is indicative and represents the lower end of our preliminary cost
estimates for the initial 2.5 years of the project (with the higher end being in the area of
$6 million). FIAS is interested in working in partnership with one or several donors who
would co-finance the implementation of the OHADA project via a single- or multi-donor
Trust Fund, to be administered by the International Finance Corporation (IFC).
Activities Fiscal Year 2009 Fiscal Year 2010 Fiscal Year 2011
I. Review and Amendment of
OHADA Laws
1 Consultants Fees for the review of 200,000 - -
the OHADA laws by experts
2 Consensus Building and Regional 480,000 680,000 -
Workshops (presentation and [Companies, Commercial, [Debt Recovery,
discussion of recommendations) Secured Transactions, Arbitration,
Bankruptcy] Accounting,
Transportation]
3 Consultants Fees for Drafting of 100,000 150,000 100,000
amendments
4 Staff cost (Project management & 200,000 250,000 250,000
field missions)