Upon gaining independence from France in June 1977, Djibouti inherited a unique and stable currency arrangement. The territory had been using the
Djiboutian franc (DJF), which was pegged at a fixed and unchanging parity to the US dollar (USD 1 = DJF 177.721) since 1949. This peg was managed by the
Caisse Centrale de Coopération Économique (CCCE), a French public agency, which guaranteed full convertibility. Consequently, Djibouti entered statehood with a fully convertible, hard currency backed by foreign reserves, a rare advantage for a new and economically modest nation.
The new government, led by President Hassan Gouled Aptidon, made a deliberate and strategic decision to maintain this monetary framework. Rather than establishing a central bank or printing currency to finance development—a path that often leads to inflation in nascent states—Djibouti opted for continuity. It formally institutionalized the existing system by creating the
Banque Nationale de Djibouti in 1977, but its role was strictly limited to issuing currency and managing the currency board. The French Treasury continued to guarantee the convertibility, ensuring the franc's stability and credibility.
This choice defined Djibouti's monetary background in 1977: one of prudent conservatism over sovereign experimentation. The fixed peg to the dollar provided immediate price stability, attracted foreign commerce to its strategic port, and fostered confidence in the financial system. However, it also meant surrendering autonomous monetary policy; Djibouti could not devalue its currency to boost competitiveness or set its own interest rates. The currency situation was therefore characterized by a trade-off—sacrificing monetary sovereignty for the perceived greater benefits of low inflation and integration into the global trading system, a foundation upon which its service-based economy would be built.