Overview

The Burundian Franc is the official currency of Burundi. It is issued and managed by the Bank of the Republic of Burundi (Banque de la République du Burundi). The Franc floats on foreign exchange markets and has experienced significant depreciation due to political instability, civil conflict, and economic mismanagement. Burundi remains one of Africa's poorest and most conflict-affected nations.

Etymology & History

The word "Franc" derives from the medieval French monetary unit ("Francie" = France) and was adopted across the French colonial empire. Burundi, as a Belgian trust territory following German colonization, adopted the Burundian Franc in 1964 upon independence, replacing the Belgian Franc and various colonial-era currencies.

Burundi's monetary history includes German colonial marks, Belgian francs (colonial period), and the Burundian Franc (1964–present), alongside periods of severe instability due to ethnic conflict (1993–2005 civil war, 2015–2017 political crisis).

Timeline of Key Events

Year Event
1964 Burundian Franc introduced upon independence
1993 Ethnic conflict begins; currency depreciates sharply
1993–2005 Civil war and humanitarian crisis; currency instability
2005 Peace agreement; currency stabilization attempted
2015 Political crisis; Franc depreciates 40%+
2020–present Gradual recovery; inflation remains elevated

Current Denominations

Coins in circulation: 1, 5, 10, 25, 50 Centimes; 1, 5 Francs (limited use)

Banknotes in circulation: 500, 1,000, 2,000, 5,000, 10,000 Francs

Withdrawn: Pre-2005 notes gradually replaced

Exchange Rate Regime

Free float with Central Bank intervention to manage extreme volatility during political/economic crises.

Convertibility

  • Current account: Partially convertible; restrictions common
  • Capital account: Severely restricted; capital controls frequent

Monetary Policy Framework

The Central Bank has limited credibility due to repeated crises. Inflation targeting framework weak. Monetary policy frequently subordinated to political pressures and fiscal deficits.

Notable Characteristics

  • Extreme economic fragility: Burundi ranks among world's poorest nations
  • Conflict-driven currency instability: Depreciations coincide with political crises
  • High denomination notes: Reflect hyperinflation periods
  • Remittance-dependent: Diaspora flows significant foreign exchange source
  • International aid dependency: IMF/World Bank programs frequent