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Tanzania Economy June 2026: Inflation Hits 4.2%, Oil Shock & TZS 62.33 Trillion Budget Explained | TICGL
TICGL Economic Research · Tanzania Economic Update

Tanzania's Economy in June 2026: Inflation Rises to 4.2%, a Middle East Oil Shock, and a TZS 62.33 Trillion Budget

A full, data-driven reading of the Bank of Tanzania's Monthly Economic Review (June 2026 issue, covering May 2026 data) — what moved inflation, monetary policy, the Shilling, government finances, public debt and trade, and what it means for Tanzania's Dira 2050 ambitions.

📅 Published 11 July 2026 📄 Source: Bank of Tanzania Monthly Economic Review, June 2026 ⏰ ~14 min read
4.2%
Headline Inflation, May 2026
5.75%
Central Bank Rate
2,616.9
TZS per USD, May 2026
USD 5,538.8m
Gross FX Reserves
TZS 62.33tn
FY2026/27 Budget

Executive Summary

  • Inflation is rising but contained: headline inflation reached 4.2 percent in May 2026 (up from 4.0% in April and 3.2% a year earlier), still within Tanzania's national target and the SADC/EAC convergence bands, driven chiefly by transport costs following a Middle East-linked oil shock.
  • Global backdrop is fragile: the Strait of Hormuz conflict pushed Brent crude to a peak above USD 120/barrel in April 2026 before easing to USD 107.14 in May; global growth is now projected to slow to 2.8 percent in 2026.
  • Policy stance unchanged: the Monetary Policy Committee held the Central Bank Rate at 5.75 percent for Q2 2026, while private sector credit grew a robust 23.2 percent year-on-year and M3 money supply accelerated to 25.2 percent.
  • The Shilling weakened modestly: trading at TZS 2,616.88/USD in May 2026 (vs. 2,612.46 in April), though it is still 3.02 percent stronger than a year earlier.
  • A landmark budget: the FY2026/27 national budget of TZS 62.33 trillion (+10.3% y/y) marks the first year of Tanzania Development Vision 2050 (Dira 2050) implementation, targeting 6.3% real GDP growth and a fiscal deficit capped at 3% of GDP.
  • External position improved on gold: exports of goods and services rose 17.8 percent to USD 19.7 billion (year ending May 2026), led by a 46.7 percent surge in gold exports, though the current account deficit widened slightly to USD 2.2 billion on costlier freight and imports.
  • Reserves remain adequate: gross official reserves climbed to USD 5,538.8 million, covering 4.3 months of imports — above the national adequacy threshold.

1. Global Economic Conditions and the Oil Shock

May 2026 was dominated by the spillover of the Middle East conflict into global energy markets. The closure of the Strait of Hormuz curtailed Gulf oil production and exports, pushing crude prices sharply higher from February 2026 before a partial easing in May. The Brent monthly average declined from USD 117.29/barrel in April 2026 to USD 107.14/barrel in May 2026 — still far above the pre-conflict level of roughly USD 63/barrel seen in late 2025.

Brent Crude Oil Price, Monthly Average
USD per barrel, May 2025 – May 2026
Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA); Bank of Tanzania, MER June 2026.
Real GDP Growth, Select Economies
Percent, 2025–2027 (OECD projections)
Source: OECD Economic Outlook, Volume 2026 Issue 1, June 2026.

Global growth is now projected to slow to 2.8 percent in 2026, with a prolonged closure of Gulf facilities capable of pushing this down to 2.1 percent in 2026 and 1.8 percent in 2027 — pushing several economies close to recession. Inflation accelerated in the United States (4.2%) and the Euro area (3.2%) on energy costs, while the UK held at 2.8 percent. China's inflation stayed subdued at 1.2 percent amid weak demand; India's rose to a sixteen-month high of 3.9 percent.

World Commodity Prices — May 2026 vs. Pre-Conflict Levels
CommodityMay 2026Apr 2026Trend Since Feb 2026
Brent crude oil (USD/barrel)107.14117.29Sharply higher, easing
Urea fertiliser (USD/tonne)~771n/aElevated
DAP fertiliser (USD/tonne)~770n/aElevated
Soybean oil (USD/tonne)~1,775n/aRising
Palm oil (USD/tonne)1,139.91,148.0Broadly stable
Gold (USD/troy oz)4,587.24,721.4Historically elevated
Arabica coffee (USD/kg)6.957.3Easing from 2025 highs

2. Domestic Inflation Developments

Tanzania's headline inflation rose to 4.2 percent in May 2026, from 4.0 percent in April and 3.2 percent a year earlier — still comfortably inside the national target band and SADC/EAC convergence criteria. The increase reflects the pass-through of elevated global fuel prices into transport costs, which alone jumped to 11.9 percent annual inflation in May 2026 (from 1.7% a year earlier). Core inflation, which strips out unprocessed food and energy, rose to 3.4 percent, up from 2.1 percent a year earlier, and remained the single largest contributor to the headline rate (2.6 percentage points of the 4.2%).

Headline, Core and Energy Inflation Trend
Twelve-month percentage change, May 2025 – May 2026
Source: National Bureau of Statistics and Bank of Tanzania computations.
Table 2.1.1 — Inflation Development by Category (Base: 2020=100)
Main GroupWeight (%)May 2025Apr 2026May 2026
Food and non-alcoholic beverages28.25.65.75.6
Transport14.11.79.211.9
Housing, water, electricity, gas & other fuels15.13.41.70.7
Furnishings & household equipment7.92.32.62.5
Restaurants & accommodation6.61.81.81.9
Education services2.03.22.62.7
All items (Headline inflation)100.03.24.04.2
Core (excl. food & energy)73.92.13.13.4
Non-core26.15.66.36.3
Energy, fuel and utilities5.76.15.35.0
Services37.21.04.04.7
Goods62.84.24.04.0

Food inflation eased marginally to 5.6 percent as sorghum, wheat, finger millet, beans and maize prices stabilised, and is expected to moderate further with the May/June 2026 harvest. National Food Reserve Agency stocks stood at a still-adequate 500,692 tonnes in May 2026, after releasing 10,234.5 tonnes of maize and paddy to traders during the month.

3. Monetary Policy and Money Supply

The Monetary Policy Committee kept the Central Bank Rate (CBR) at 5.75 percent for the quarter ending June 2026, and narrowed the CBR corridor to ±150 basis points (from ±200 bps) to sharpen policy transmission. The 7-day interbank cash market (IBCM) rate averaged 5.92 percent — comfortably within the corridor — while the Bank injected liquidity via reverse repos, which rose to TZS 399.5 billion in May from TZS 379.7 billion in April.

Money Supply (M3) and Private Sector Credit Stock
Billions of TZS, March 2025 – May 2026
Source: Bank of Tanzania and banks (Depository Corporations Survey).

Extended broad money (M3) expanded by 25.2 percent year-on-year, up from 22 percent in April, driven by sustained private sector credit growth. Credit to the private sector grew 23.2 percent in the year to May 2026. Growth was broad-based: transport & communication led at 44.6 percent, followed by trade (35.0%) and agriculture (30.9%). Personal loans (MSME-linked) remained the largest share of outstanding credit at 34.7 percent.

Transport & communication credit growth: 44.6% Trade credit growth: 35.0% Agriculture credit growth: 30.9% Manufacturing credit growth: 3.3%

4. Interest Rates

Interest rates were broadly stable, with modest declines on both lending and deposit sides. The overall lending rate was little changed at 15.32 percent (from 15.33% in April), while the negotiated rate for prime borrowers eased to 11.90 percent. The overall deposit rate fell to 8.43 percent, narrowing the one-year lending–deposit spread to 5.22 percentage points — the tightest spread in over a year, pointing to improving intermediation efficiency.

Lending Rate, Deposit Rate & Treasury Bill Rate
Percent, March 2025 – May 2026
Source: Banks and Bank of Tanzania computations.
Table 2.3.1 — Lending and Deposit Interest Rates (%)
RateDec 2025Feb 2026Apr 2026May 2026
Overall lending rate15.2415.1115.3315.32
Negotiated lending rate12.3812.1912.5611.90
Overall time deposit rate8.368.328.548.43
12-month deposit rate9.589.829.8110.17
Overall Treasury bill rate5.875.685.064.74
Short-term interest spread5.885.595.505.22

5. Financial Markets and the Shilling

The Government securities market performed well: two Treasury bills auctions (combined tender TZS 498.1 billion) were oversubscribed with bids of TZS 1,330.3 billion, and weighted average yields eased to 4.74 percent. Longer-dated 15- and 20-year Treasury bond auctions were undersubscribed relative to tender size, consistent with a steepening preference for short-dated paper. In the Interbank Foreign Exchange Market (IFEM), turnover rose to USD 119.3 million (from USD 64.6 million in April), supported by seasonal gold-export inflows; the Bank auctioned USD 44 million in support of orderly market conditions.

TZS/USD Exchange Rate (End of Period)
May 2025 – May 2026
Source: Bank of Tanzania, National Debt Developments table.

The Shilling depreciated slightly month-on-month to TZS 2,616.88/USD in May 2026 (from 2,612.46 in April), but on an annual basis it actually strengthened by 3.02 percent — a turnaround from the 3.82 percent depreciation recorded in May 2025, aided by strong gold export receipts and BOT market interventions.

6. Government Budgetary Operations and the FY2026/27 Budget

In April 2026 (the latest month with cheques-issued data), the Government collected TZS 3,242.3 billion — 7.1 percent above target — with tax revenue of TZS 2,690.6 billion (10.2% above target) driven by import duties and income tax. Total expenditure reached TZS 3,457.2 billion, of which TZS 2,696.6 billion was recurrent and TZS 760.6 billion development spending (well below the TZS 1,448.5 billion estimate, signalling execution lags on capital projects).

Central Government Revenue, April 2026
Billions of TZS — Actual 2025 vs. Estimate & Actual 2026
Source: Ministry of Finance and Bank of Tanzania computations.
Central Government Expenditure, April 2026
Billions of TZS — Actual 2025 vs. Estimate & Actual 2026
Source: Ministry of Finance and Bank of Tanzania computations.

Box 1 — Summary of the FY2026/27 Proposed Budget

The Government budget for FY2026/27 is set at TZS 62.33 trillion — a 10.3 percent increase on 2025/26 — of which 74.2 percent is to be financed domestically. Development expenditure is projected at about 33 percent of the total. This is the first year of Tanzania Development Vision 2050 (Dira 2050) implementation, focused on macroeconomic stability, tax-base expansion and digitalisation, and productive-sector strengthening. Notably, the Bank of Tanzania Act (Cap. 197) is being amended to cut the Central Bank overdraft limit from 18 percent to 14 percent of prior-year actual revenue — a fiscal-discipline signal.

Key macroeconomic assumptions: real GDP growth of 6.3% in 2026; inflation contained within 3–5%; domestic revenue at 17.1% of GDP and tax revenue at 13.7% of GDP; fiscal deficit capped at 3% of GDP; and reserves sufficient to cover at least four months of imports. The projected budget deficit is TZS 7.71 trillion, to be financed through domestic and external borrowing under the Medium-Term Debt Management Strategy (2025/26–2027/28).

EAC 2026/27 Budgets: How Tanzania Compares
Total budget, Billions of USD
Source: Government of URT 2026/27 Budget Speech and Treasuries of EAC member states.
Table 2.5.1 — 2026/27 Fiscal Indicators, Select East African Countries
IndicatorKenyaRwandaTanzaniaUganda
Total budget (Billions of USD)37.25.323.922.5
Domestic revenue (% of GDP)17.417.115.9
Tax revenue (% of GDP)15.513.714.0
Fiscal deficit (% of GDP)5.54.82.96.9

Tanzania's fiscal deficit target of 2.9% of GDP is the most conservative in the region, well below Kenya's 5.5% and Uganda's 6.9% — a deliberate fiscal-discipline signal ahead of the Dira 2050 push, though it also implies less fiscal space for public investment relative to peers.

7. Public Debt Developments

Tanzania's national debt stock stood at USD 51,492.5 million at end-May 2026, a marginal decline from the prior month, driven by lower external and domestic debt. External debt accounted for 70.8 percent of the total.

National Debt Stock: External vs. Domestic
Millions of USD, May 2025 – May 2026
Source: Ministry of Finance and Bank of Tanzania.
External Debt Stock by Creditor Category, May 2026 (Provisional)
CreditorAmount (USD mn)Share (%)
Multilateral20,946.357.5
Commercial13,279.736.4
Bilateral1,558.54.3
Export credit662.31.8
Total external debt stock36,446.8100.0

Multilateral institutions remain by far the dominant creditor (57.5%), with the largest use-of-funds share going to balance-of-payments/budget support and transport & telecommunications. The US dollar continues to dominate currency composition at 62.9 percent, though its share has been falling steadily (from 66.6% a year ago) as the debt portfolio diversifies. External loan disbursements totalled USD 125.9 million in May, against debt service payments of USD 189.4 million (USD 140 million in principal).

8. External Sector Performance

The current account deficit widened to USD 2,209.5 million in the year ending May 2026 (from USD 2,090.9 million a year earlier), as import growth (freight costs, refined petroleum) outpaced exports. Even so, the external position strengthened on the back of a gold-led export surge.

Exports vs. Imports of Goods and Services
Millions of USD, Year Ending May, 2022–2026
Source: Tanzania Revenue Authority and Bank of Tanzania computations.
Top Exports, Year Ending May 2026
Millions of USD
Source: Tanzania Revenue Authority and Bank of Tanzania computations.
Gross Official Foreign Exchange Reserves
Millions of USD, FY2018–FY2025
Source: Bank of Tanzania, Table A1.
Table 2.7.1 — Current Account Summary, Year Ending May (Millions of USD)
Item202420252026p% Change
Goods account (net)-6,058.3-4,555.6-5,410.618.8
Exports of goods and services14,258.216,706.219,679.417.8
Imports of goods and services16,141.917,322.120,408.617.8
Services account (net)4,174.63,939.64,681.418.8
Current account balance-2,907.9-2,090.9-2,209.55.7

Gold exports surged 46.7 percent to USD 5,532.3 million, supported by both favourable global prices and rising domestic production; manufactured goods exports rose 38.3 percent on strong regional demand for iron, steel and glassware. Travel receipts (tourism) grew 9.5 percent to USD 4,419.1 million on a 5.9 percent rise in international arrivals (to 2,298,900), while transport receipts grew 16.0 percent, underscoring Tanzania's role as a regional logistics hub.

9. Zanzibar Snapshot

Zanzibar's headline inflation rose to 5.5 percent in May 2026 (from 4.2% a year earlier), driven by food and transport costs, even as non-food inflation eased to 2.1 percent. The Government's resource envelope reached TZS 133.3 billion (61.7% of target), while total expenditure of TZS 309 billion left an overall deficit of TZS 175.7 billion, financed domestically. On the external side, Zanzibar's current account surplus grew 21.2 percent to USD 864.8 million (year ending May 2026), powered by a 21 percent rise in tourist arrivals to 947,169 and record clove export values.

Zanzibar: Key Indicators, Year Ending May 2026
Indicator20252026p% Change
Exports of goods and services (USD mn)1,332.81,639.723.0
Imports of goods and services (USD mn)633.4785.224.0
Current account balance (USD mn)713.6864.821.2
Tourist arrivals782,800 (approx.)947,16921.0

10. Selected Economic Indicators, 2018–2025

Table A1 (Extract) — National Accounts, Money and Balance of Payments
Indicator2021202220232024r2025p
GDP growth, constant 2015 prices (%)4.84.75.15.56.0
Inflation, annual average (%)3.74.33.83.13.3
Private sector credit growth (%)10.022.517.312.423.6
Exports of goods (Mill. USD)6,756.27,223.87,696.69,121.610,293.6
Current account balance (Mill. USD)-2,374.3-5,482.2-2,960.6-2,379.8-2,015.2
Gross foreign reserves (Mill. USD)6,386.05,177.25,450.15,546.96,329.0
Import cover of reserves (Months)6.64.74.54.54.9
External debt stock (Mill. USD)25,519.327,832.530,252.731,950.934,765.3

Source: Ministry of Finance and Planning, Bank of Tanzania, and Tanzania Revenue Authority. r = revised, p = provisional.

Muhtasari kwa Kiswahili

Mfumuko wa bei: Mfumuko wa bei nchini Tanzania uliongezeka hadi asilimia 4.2 mwezi Mei 2026, kutoka asilimia 4.0 mwezi Aprili, ukichochewa hasa na kupanda kwa gharama za usafirishaji kutokana na mgogoro wa Mashariki ya Kati uliosababisha bei ya mafuta duniani kupanda.
Sera ya fedha: Benki Kuu ya Tanzania (BOT) imeendelea kudumisha Riba ya Benki Kuu (CBR) katika asilimia 5.75 kwa robo ya mwaka inayoishia Juni 2026, huku mikopo kwa sekta binafsi ikikua kwa asilimia 23.2.
Bajeti ya 2026/27: Bajeti kuu ya Serikali ya TZS trilioni 62.33 imepitishwa, ikiwa ongezeko la asilimia 10.3 kutoka bajeti ya 2025/26. Hii ni mwaka wa kwanza wa utekelezaji wa Dira ya Maendeleo ya Taifa 2050, ikilenga ukuaji wa uchumi wa asilimia 6.3 na nakisi ya bajeti isiyozidi asilimia 3 ya Pato la Taifa.
Sekta ya nje: Mauzo ya bidhaa na huduma nje ya nchi yaliongezeka kwa asilimia 17.8 hadi dola za Marekani bilioni 19.7, yakichagizwa na ongezeko la asilimia 46.7 la mauzo ya dhahabu. Akiba ya fedha za kigeni imefikia dola milioni 5,538.8, sawa na kufunika miezi 4.3 ya uagizaji bidhaa kutoka nje.
Deni la Taifa: Deni la Taifa limefikia dola za Marekani milioni 51,492.5 mwishoni mwa Mei 2026, ambapo asilimia 70.8 ni deni la nje, huku taasisi za kimataifa (multilateral) zikiendelea kuwa wadai wakuu.

Primary source: Bank of Tanzania, Monthly Economic Review, June 2026 (data through May 2026), ISSN 0856-6844. Analysis, charts and commentary by the Tanzania Economic Research Institute (TERI), a research arm of TICGL. Figures marked "p" are provisional and "r" are revised, per BOT convention. This page is for informational purposes and does not constitute investment advice.

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