Tanzania Investment and Consultant Group Ltd

| Economic Research Centre

Zanzibar’s Economic Performance October 2025
October 10, 2025  
Zanzibar's economic performance in August 2025, as detailed in the Bank of Tanzania's Monthly Economic Review (September 2025), reflects sustained momentum driven by tourism recovery, clove exports, and fiscal investments, contributing to Tanzania's overall Q3 growth estimate above 6%. With headline inflation easing to 5.8% (within moderate bounds), revenues up 3.8% YoY, and service receipts […]

Zanzibar's economic performance in August 2025, as detailed in the Bank of Tanzania's Monthly Economic Review (September 2025), reflects sustained momentum driven by tourism recovery, clove exports, and fiscal investments, contributing to Tanzania's overall Q3 growth estimate above 6%. With headline inflation easing to 5.8% (within moderate bounds), revenues up 3.8% YoY, and service receipts surging 30.6% year-to-date to USD 1,267.5 million, Zanzibar's semi-autonomous economy bolsters national forex inflows and diversification. Projections indicate 6.5% GDP growth for Zanzibar in 2025, outpacing mainland Tanzania's 6.0% and fueled by public infrastructure spending, tourism (now the top earner), and manufacturing. This semi-autonomous region's stability—despite a widening trade deficit—enhances Tanzania's external buffers (current account deficit narrowed 33% nationally) and supports Vision 2050 goals for inclusive growth, with tourism generating rural jobs amid 5.5% national unemployment. However, persistent deficits and recurrent spending (73% of outlays) highlight needs for export diversification beyond cloves and tourism to mitigate global risks like oil volatility.

World Bank and IMF outlooks affirm Zanzibar's role in Tanzania's 6-7% medium-term trajectory, with tourism's multiplier effects (e.g., 9.3% services export growth) aiding poverty reduction in coastal areas.


1. General Overview

Zanzibar’s economy continued to perform strongly in 2025, driven by tourism, services, and clove exports. Both revenue collection and imports improved compared to the previous year.


2. Government Budgetary Operations

ItemAmount (TZS Billion)% Change (YoY)Remarks
Total Revenue (including grants)106.3+3.8%Improved collections from taxes and levies
– Domestic Revenue99.5+3.4%Mainly from VAT, import duties, and excise taxes
– Grants6.8+7.9%From development partners
Total Expenditure155.6+6.2%Driven by recurrent spending
– Recurrent Expenditure113.8+5.6%Mostly wages, goods, and services
– Development Expenditure41.8+7.9%Infrastructure and education projects
Overall, Balance (after grants)-49.3Fiscal deficit financed by loans and overdrafts


The budget deficit widened slightly due to higher recurrent and development spending, though revenues performed above expectations.


3. External Sector (Trade Performance)

CategoryAug 2024 (USD Million)Aug 2025 (USD Million)% ChangeRemarks
Exports (Goods & Services)15.617.2+10.3%Growth from cloves and tourism services
– Cloves6.47.1+10.9%Higher volume and price
– Manufactured Goods2.83.1+10.7%Mostly food and beverages
– Services (Tourism)6.47.0+9.3%Continued tourist arrivals recovery
Imports (Goods & Services)87.592.8+6.1%Mainly oil, food, and construction materials
Trade Balance-71.9-75.6Deficit widenedDue to import growth exceeding export growth

Zanzibar’s trade deficit persisted but was cushioned by growing tourism receipts and higher export earnings from cloves.


4. Inflation and Prices

IndicatorAug 2024 (%)Aug 2025 (%)Change (pp)Remarks
Headline Inflation6.95.8-1.1Eased due to stable food and fuel prices
Food Inflation7.45.9-1.5Improved local food supply
Non-Food Inflation6.05.7-0.3Stable housing and transport costs


Zanzibar experienced lower inflation in August 2025, driven by improved domestic supply and reduced import costs.


5. Key Economic Indicators – Summary Table

IndicatorUnitAug 2024Aug 2025% Change / Notes
Total Revenue (incl. grants)TZS Billion102.4106.3+3.8%
Total ExpenditureTZS Billion146.5155.6+6.2%
Exports (Goods & Services)USD Million15.617.2+10.3%
Imports (Goods & Services)USD Million87.592.8+6.1%
Headline Inflation%6.95.8
Food Inflation%7.45.9
Trade BalanceUSD Million-71.9-75.6Widened deficit

Implications for Tanzania's Economic Development

1. Production: Tourism and Export-Led Expansion Amid Sectoral Resilience

  • Key Observations Recap: Economy driven by tourism, services, and cloves; no explicit August production data, but implied via 10.3% export growth (cloves +10.9%, manufactured goods +10.7%).
  • Implications for Economic Development:
    • Sectoral Diversification and Job Creation: Cloves (USD 7.1 million, 41% of goods exports) and manufacturing (USD 3.1 million) signal agricultural and industrial maturation, supporting national ag credit growth (30.1%). Tourism's 9.3% rise (USD 7.0 million) aligns with 30.6% year-to-date service receipts, generating ~200,000 jobs in hospitality and spillovers to mainland trade. This cushions mainland vulnerabilities, contributing 6.5% to Zanzibar's projected growth.
    • Infrastructure Synergies: Production ties to development spending (TZS 41.8 billion, +7.9%), funding ports and roads that enhance national logistics, per SECO's emphasis on public investments driving 6.7% 2026 growth.
    • Risks: Clove price dependence (weather-sensitive) could amplify food inflation if harvests falter, mirroring mainland trends (7.7%).
IndicatorAug 2024Aug 2025% ChangeImplication for Development
Cloves ExportsUSD 6.4 mnUSD 7.1 mn+10.9%Boosts ag productivity, aiding national 30.1% credit growth.
Manufactured GoodsUSD 2.8 mnUSD 3.1 mn+10.7%Supports industrial shift, targeting 6.5% Zanzibar GDP.
Tourism ServicesUSD 6.4 mnUSD 7.0 mn+9.3%Drives 30.6% service receipts ytd, enhancing forex.

2. Prices (Inflation): Easing Pressures Foster Consumption Stability

  • Key Observations Recap: Headline 5.8% (-1.1 pp YoY), food 5.9% (-1.5 pp), non-food 5.7% (-0.3 pp), due to stable supplies and lower imports.
  • Implications for Economic Development:
    • Anchored Household Spending: Declining food inflation (from improved local supply) aligns with mainland's 3.4% rate, boosting consumption (62.8% of inflation basket) and supporting tourism's labor-intensive growth. This stability aids national monetary easing (CBR 5.75%), per BoT's policy statement.
    • Import Cost Relief: Reduced fuel/housing pressures (tied to global oil easing) lower production costs for cloves/manufacturing, enhancing competitiveness in EAC markets.
    • Risks: If global fertilizers remain elevated (Chart 1.5), clove/ag costs could reverse gains, pressuring 5-7% SADC convergence.
IndicatorAug 2024 (%)Aug 2025 (%)Change (pp)Implication for Development
Headline Inflation6.95.8-1.1Stabilizes 6.5% growth, per SECO.
Food Inflation7.45.9-1.5Supports rural incomes, tourism jobs.
Non-Food Inflation6.05.7-0.3Eases housing costs, aiding urban development.

3. Fiscal Operations: Revenue Resilience Funds Growth Investments

  • Key Observations Recap: Revenues TZS 106.3 billion (+3.8% YoY, 99.5 billion domestic); expenditures TZS 155.6 billion (+6.2%), deficit TZS 49.3 billion; recurrent TZS 113.8 billion (73%), development TZS 41.8 billion.
  • Implications for Economic Development:
    • Pro-Growth Spending Allocation: Above-target revenues (VAT/import duties) finance 7.9% development rise, targeting education/infrastructure that amplifies tourism (e.g., airport expansions) and national connectivity. Grants (+7.9%) from partners enhance fiscal space, supporting 6.5% growth.
    • Deficit Management: Widened gap (financed domestically) remains sustainable (~4-5% GDP), mirroring mainland's 4.5%, and cushions trade imbalances via loans.
    • Risks: Recurrent dominance (wages/goods) risks efficiency losses; diversification beyond taxes needed for 16.5% GDP revenue target.
ItemAmount (TZS Bn)% Change YoYImplication for Development
Total Revenue (incl. grants)106.3+3.8%Funds 7.9% development, boosting tourism infra.
Recurrent Expenditure113.8+5.6%Supports jobs, but caps private credit if unchecked.
Development Expenditure41.8+7.9%Drives 6.7% 2026 growth via projects.
Overall Balance-49.3Sustainable deficit aids national fiscal coordination.

4. Trade (External Sector): Deficit Cushioned by Services Boom

  • Key Observations Recap: Exports USD 17.2 million (+10.3%), imports USD 92.8 million (+6.1%), balance -USD 75.6 million (widened from -71.9 million).
  • Implications for Economic Development:
    • Forex Inflow Acceleration: Tourism/cloves growth narrows effective deficits, with services offsetting goods imports (oil/food). This bolsters national reserves (USD 6.2 billion), per BoT, and supports TZS stability (appreciation 6.6%).
    • Trade Diversification: +10.7% manufactured exports signals value-addition, aiding EAC integration and mainland manufacturing synergies.
    • Risks: Import reliance (construction materials) exposes to global prices; surplus in services (USD 13.9 million implied) vulnerable to tourism slumps.
CategoryAug 2024 (USD Mn)Aug 2025 (USD Mn)% ChangeImplication for Development
Exports (Goods & Services)15.617.2+10.3%Enhances national exports (+14.8% mainland).
Imports (Goods & Services)87.592.8+6.1%Pressures balance but funds growth inputs.
Trade Balance-71.9-75.6WidenedCushioned by 30.6% service receipts ytd.

Overall Summary and Forward Outlook

Zanzibar's August metrics imply a complementary growth engine for Tanzania: easing inflation and fiscal prudence sustain 6.5% expansion, with tourism/cloves inflows mitigating deficits and amplifying national 6%+ trajectory. This fosters inter-regional synergies, e.g., tourism's forex aiding mainland ag/mining. By Q4 2025, sustained trends could yield 6.7% growth, but enhancing clove processing and non-oil imports will counter risks like global uncertainties (Chart 1.1a). Reforms for fiscal efficiency and trade balances position Zanzibar as a tourism hub, unlocking 7% national potential.

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