Title
Harmonizing Business Laws in Africa: OHADA Calls the Tune
Abstract
OHADA (in English, “Organization for Harmonization in Africa of Business Laws”) is a system of business laws and implementing institutions. Sixteen West African nations adopted this regime in order to increase their attractiveness to foreign investment. Because most of the member-states are former French colonies, the OHADA laws are based on the French legal system. Despite certain economists’ recent, well-publicized assertions that any French-based legal system is incompatible with development, other studies challenge those claims and in doing so outline characteristics that a pro-development system of business laws should possess. A review of selected provisions from OHADA’s corporate law and of OHADA’s institutions reveals that they correspond to those characteristics. Interviews conducted with legal professionals in Senegal, Côte d’Ivoire and Cameroon highlight the local perception that the OHADA regime, while still young, offers both technical and aspirational support for business transactions. The paper closes with a rough cut at measuring OHADA’s success even in these very early days, and with specific recommendations to strengthen the OHADA institutions.
Disciplines
Business Organizations Law | Commercial Law | Comparative and Foreign Law | International Law | Law and Society
Date of this Version
May 2005
Recommended Citation
Claire M. Dickerson, "Harmonizing Business Laws in Africa: OHADA Calls the Tune" (May 13, 2005). bepress Legal Series. bepress Legal Series.Working Paper 618.
https://law.bepress.com/expresso/eps/618