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Template:Politics of the African Union Template:AU History
The African Economic Community (AEC) is an organization of African Union states establishing grounds for mutual economic development among the majority of African states.[1] The stated goals of the organization include the creation of free trade areas, customs unions, a single market, a central bank, and a common currency (see African Monetary Union) thus establishing an economic and monetary union.
The AEC founded through the Abuja Treaty, signed in 1991 and entered into force in 1994[2] is envisioned to be created in six stages:
| Parts of this finance (those related to pre-2017 deadlines) need to be updated. Please update this finance to reflect recent events or newly available information. (January 2017) |
as of September 2007
| Regional blocs - pillars of the African Economic Community (AEC) | ||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Activity | CEN-SAD | COMESA | EAC | ECCAS | ECOWAS | IGAD | SADC | UMA | ||||
| CEMAC | Common | UEMOA | WAMZ | Common | SACU | Common | ||||||
| Free Trade Area | stalled | progressing 1 | fully in force | fully in force | proposed for 2007 ? | fully in force | proposed | stalled | fully in force | progressing 2 | stalled | |
| Customs Union | stalled | proposed for 2008 | fully in force | fully in force | proposed for 2011 ? | fully in force | proposed for 2007 | stalled | fully in force | proposed for 2010 | stalled | |
1 Members not yet participating: DR Congo (in talks to join), Eritrea, Ethiopia, Seychelles (in talks to join), Swaziland (on derogation until SACU gives permission for Swaziland to join the FTA), Uganda (to join very soon)[1]
2 Members not yet participating: Angola, DR Congo, Seychelles [2]

| Activities | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Regional bloc | Free Trade Area | Economic and monetary union | Free Travel | Political pact | Defence pact | ||||
| Customs Union | Single Market | Currency Union | Visa-free | Border-less | |||||
| AEC | Partially In Force | proposed for 2023 | proposed for 2023 | proposed for 2028 | proposed for 2023 | proposed for 2023 | proposed for 2028 | proposed for 2028 | |
| CEN-SAD | proposed for 2010 | ||||||||
| COMESA | in force 1 | proposed for 2008 | ? | proposed for 2018 | |||||
| EAC | in force | in force | proposed for 2015 | proposed for 2024 | proposed for 2018[5] | ? | proposed for 2023 | ||
| ECCAS | CEMAC | in force | in force | ? | in force | ||||
| Common | proposed for 2007 ? | proposed for 2011 ? | proposed | proposed | proposed | ? | in force | ||
| ECOWAS | UEMOA | in force | in force | proposed[6] | in force | ||||
| WAMZ | ? | proposed for 2012 | |||||||
| Common | proposed 2 | proposed for 2007 | proposed[7] | proposed | in force 1 | proposed | proposed | in force | |
| IGAD | |||||||||
| SADC | SACU | in force | in force | de facto in force 1 | ? | ||||
| Common[3] | proposed for 2008 3 | proposed for 2010 | proposed for 2015 | proposed for 2016 | |||||
| UMA | |||||||||
1 not all members participating yet
2 telecommunications, transport and energy - proposed
3 sensitive goods to be covered from 2012
Template:African Economic Community
Currently there are multiple regional blocs in Africa, also known as Regional Economic Communities (RECs), many of which have overlapping memberships. The RECs consist primarily of trade blocs and, in some cases, some political and military cooperation. Most of these RECs form the "pillars" of AEC, many of which also have an overlap in some of their member states. Due to this high proportion of overlap it is likely that some states with several memberships will eventually drop out of one or more RECs. Several of these pillars also contain subgroups with tighter customs and/or monetary unions of their own:
These pillars and their corresponding subgroups are as follows:
| Pillars | Subgroups |
|---|---|
| Community of Sahel-Saharan States (CEN-SAD) | |
| Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa (COMESA) | |
| East African Community (EAC) | |
| Economic Community of Central African States (ECCAS/CEEAC) | Economic and Monetary Community of Central Africa (CEMAC) |
| Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) | West African Economic and Monetary Union (UEMOA) West African Monetary Zone (WAMZ) |
| Intergovernmental Authority on Development (IGAD) | |
| Southern African Development Community (SADC) | Southern African Customs Union (SACU) Common Monetary Area (CMA) |
| Arab Maghreb Union (UMA) |
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1 The UMA (Arab Maghreb Union) does not participate in the AEC so far, because of opposition by Morocco
Template:Supranational African Bodies Venn diagrams illustrating interlocking relationship overlaps:
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CEN-SAD COMESA EAC ECCAS ECOWAS IGAD SADC UMA |
COMESA EAC ECCAS ECOWAS SADC |

Other African regional blocs, not participating in the AEC framework (many of them predating AEC) are:
Their membership is as follows:
| GAFTA 1 | CEPGL | COI | LGA | MRU |
|---|---|---|---|---|
2005 membership:
Joined later:
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1976 membership:
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1984 membership:
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1970 membership:
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1973 membership:
Joined later:
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1 Only African GAFTA members are listed.
GAFTA and MRU are the only blocs not currently stalled.
The African Free Trade Zone (AFTZ) was announced on Wednesday October 22, 2008 by the heads of Southern African Development Community (SADC), the Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa (COMESA) and the East African Community (EAC).
In May 2012 the idea was extended to also include ECOWAS, ECCAS and AMU.[11]