The Bank of Tanzania’s August 2025 review highlights a strong fiscal outcome for June 2025, with total government revenues reaching TZS 3,753.4 billion, about 5.1% above target, driven by robust tax collections of TZS 3,108.7 billion (82.8% of total). Expenditures were contained at TZS 3,350.0 billion, with recurrent spending accounting for 72.9% and development spending […]
The Bank of Tanzania’s August 2025 review highlights a strong fiscal outcome for June 2025, with total government revenues reaching TZS 3,753.4 billion, about 5.1% above target, driven by robust tax collections of TZS 3,108.7 billion (82.8% of total). Expenditures were contained at TZS 3,350.0 billion, with recurrent spending accounting for 72.9% and development spending 27.1%. This resulted in a budget surplus of TZS 403.4 billion, reflecting strengthened tax administration, cautious spending, and improved fiscal stability, thereby easing borrowing needs and supporting macroeconomic confidence.
1. Central Government Revenues (June 2025)
Total collections:TZS 3,753.4 billion, which was 5.1% above the monthly target.
Breakdown:
Central Government:TZS 3,579.2 billion (95.4% of total).
Tax revenue:TZS 3,108.7 billion, 7.8% above target – showing the impact of stronger tax administration.
Non-tax revenue:TZS 470.5 billion, short of the target (TZS 561.5 billion).
Tax revenues continue to be the dominant source, accounting for over 80% of government revenues.
2. Central Government Expenditures (June 2025)
Total expenditure:TZS 3,350.0 billion, broadly aligned with available resources.
Breakdown:
Recurrent expenditure:TZS 2,440.6 billion
Development expenditure:TZS 909.4 billion
Development expenditure accounted for about 27.1% of total spending, while recurrent expenditure (wages, interest, and other recurrent costs) made up 72.9%.
3. Fiscal Balance Context
Revenues (TZS 3,753.4 billion) exceeded expenditures (TZS 3,350.0 billion) by about TZS 403.4 billion, implying a budget surplus in June 2025.
The surplus mainly came from stronger tax performance, while expenditure remained aligned with available resources.
Table 1: Central Government Revenues (June 2025)
Revenue Source
Amount (TZS Billion)
Share of Total (%)
Target Performance
Total Revenue
3,753.4
100.0
105.1% of target
Central Government
3,579.2
95.4
Above target (3.9%)
├─ Tax Revenue
3,108.7
82.8
107.8% of target
└─ Non-Tax Revenue
470.5
12.6
Below target (83.8%)
Table 2: Central Government Expenditures (June 2025)
Expenditure Category
Amount (TZS Billion)
Share of Total (%)
Total Expenditure
3,350.0
100.0
Recurrent Expenditure
2,440.6
72.9
├─ Wages & Salaries
(included)
—
├─ Interest Payments
(included)
—
└─ Other Recurrent
(included)
—
Development Expenditure
909.4
27.1
Economic Implications of Central Government Finances – June 2025
1. Central Government Revenues (June 2025)
Performance and Breakdown: Total collections of TZS 3,753.4 billion surpassed the monthly target by 5.1%, with central government revenue at TZS 3,579.2 billion (95.4%). Tax revenue hit TZS 3,108.7 billion (82.8% of total), exceeding its target by 7.8%, while non-tax revenue lagged at TZS 470.5 billion (12.6%), falling short of the TZS 561.5 billion target.
Economic Meaning: The strong tax performance, driven by improved administration (e.g., VAT and income tax enforcement), enhances fiscal capacity, reducing reliance on external borrowing (external debt at USD 32,955.5 million). This supports infrastructure and development spending (TZS 909.4 billion), aligning with GDP growth goals. The underperformance in non-tax revenue (e.g., fees, dividends) suggests administrative delays or inefficiencies, potentially limiting supplementary funding. Over 80% tax reliance mirrors regional trends (e.g., EAC peers), but diversification could mitigate risks from economic shocks.
2. Central Government Expenditures (June 2025)
Allocation and Balance: Total expenditure was TZS 3,350.0 billion, with recurrent expenditure at TZS 2,440.6 billion (72.9%) and development expenditure at TZS 909.4 billion (27.1%).
Economic Significance: The high recurrent share (wages, interest, operations) ensures public sector stability and debt servicing (national debt at USD 46,586.6 million), but limits capital investment. Development spending (27.1%) supports growth in agriculture (e.g., food stocks at 485,930.4 tonnes) and infrastructure, though its share below one-third indicates a cautious approach. Alignment with available resources (revenue-driven) prevents deficit financing pressures, complementing the surplus and easing domestic borrowing needs (e.g., Treasury bill yields at 8.13%).
3. Fiscal Balance Context
Surplus Achievement: Revenues exceeded expenditures by TZS 403.4 billion, yielding a surplus driven by tax overperformance and controlled spending.
Economic Implications: This surplus strengthens fiscal buffers, reducing reliance on domestic securities (e.g., TZS 158.9 billion in Treasury bills accepted) and supporting the shilling's stability (TZS 2,666.79/USD). It allows debt reduction or reinvestment, enhancing credit ratings and attracting foreign inflows (e.g., tourism receipts at USD 3,871.9 million). In a global context of easing commodity prices (oil at USD 69.2/barrel), this positions Tanzania to weather external uncertainties, though sustained surpluses depend on addressing non-tax revenue gaps.
Summary of Broader Economic Significance
Fiscal Strength and Stability: The surplus and robust tax collection signal effective fiscal management, supporting monetary easing (CBR 5.75%) and credit growth (15.9% annually). This fosters investor confidence and aligns with Tanzania's 6% growth trajectory.
Balanced Growth: While recurrent spending ensures stability, the lower development share may constrain long-term productivity gains, requiring policy focus on capital projects.
Comparative Context: Compared to 2024's fiscal deficits (e.g., 2.5% of GDP), the 2025 surplus reflects recovery, outperforming some EAC peers facing revenue shortfalls amid global trade tensions.
Challenges Ahead: Non-tax revenue underperformance and high recurrent spending (72.9%) need attention to sustain surpluses and fund development, especially with external debt at USD 32,955.5 million.