
Institutional Challenges and Policy Implications for Equitable Infrastructure Delivery
Authored by David Kafulila and Dr. Bravious Felix Kahyoza (PhD, FMVA), this rigorous mixed-methods research examines the critical bottlenecks in Public-Private Partnership (PPP) negotiations in Tanzania, revealing how institutional fragmentation, power asymmetries, and capacity deficits systematically undermine infrastructure delivery—and proposing evidence-based reforms to transform adversarial bargaining into integrative partnerships aligned with Vision 2025.
With Tanzania facing a USD 10-15 billion annual infrastructure gap and only 25 active PPP projects despite decades of liberalization, the negotiation phase has emerged as the decisive constraint on project success. The paper argues that prolonged negotiations (averaging 22 months versus 12-month benchmarks) and distributive bargaining tactics create a vicious cycle of delays, cost overruns, and terminations—threatening the nation's USD 50 billion infrastructure pipeline and industrialization ambitions.
Key Findings and Insights
Institutional Bottlenecks: A Three-Pillar Analysis
The research employs New Institutional Economics (NIE) framework to dissect how formal rules (laws, regulations) and informal norms (patronage, hierarchy) create systemic negotiation failures:
1. Legal Gaps and Regulatory Ambiguity:
2. Bureaucratic Fragmentation and Coordination Failures:
3. Capacity Deficits and Knowledge Asymmetries:
Case Study Insights:
| Project | Sector | Duration | Key Challenge | Outcome |
| TICTS Port | Transport | 18 months | Power asymmetry mitigated by donor mediation | Success: Dwell times reduced 49% |
| IPTL Energy | Energy | 24+ months | Unsolicited bid, legal gaps | Partial failure: USD 200M liabilities |
| RITES Rail | Infrastructure | 21 months | Bureaucratic vetoes, labor disputes | Termination: USD 50M losses |
| Tegeta Housing | Social | 15 months | Capacity deficits, equity disputes | Stalled: 40% completion, ongoing disputes |
Evidence-Based Policy Recommendations
The study proposes a comprehensive three-pillar reform framework combining short-term operational fixes with long-term structural transformations:
Pillar 1: Streamlined Regulatory Frameworks
Short-term actions (0-2 years):
Long-term reforms (3-5 years):
Expected impact: Align Tanzania with SADC PPP benchmarks, cutting renegotiation rates by 35%
Pillar 2: Capacity-Building for Negotiators
Implementation strategy:
Pilot sectors: Energy and transport (targeting 55% reduction in drafting delays)
Expected impact: Boost value-for-money achievement from 25% to 80% of projects, mirroring Kenyan PPP Academy successes
Pillar 3: Fortified Transparency Mechanisms
Digital transformation initiatives:
Accountability measures:
Expected impact: Cut graft costs by 15-30% (Osei-Tutu et al., 2010), unlocking USD 50 billion in infrastructure investments
Stakeholder Roles Matrix:
| Stakeholder | Short-Term Role | Long-Term Role | Resource Commitment |
| Government (PPP Centre, MoF) | Launch training pilots, publish interim guidelines | Amend PPP Act, establish unified Authority | Legislative will, budget allocation |
| Private Sector | Co-design capacity programs, share expertise | Adhere to transparency protocols | Knowledge transfer, USD 2-3M co-financing |
| Donors (World Bank, IFC) | Finance training (USD 5-10M), provide technical assistance | Support template standardization | Grant funding, advisory services |
| Civil Society (NGOs, Unions) | Participate in consultations, monitor transparency | Ensure inclusive stakeholder engagement | Advocacy, grassroots mobilization |
Conclusion
Tanzania's PPP negotiation landscape represents a textbook case of institutional entrapment—where well-intentioned partnership frameworks collide with structural fragilities inherited from post-liberalization reforms. The research's mixed-methods rigor—combining qualitative depth (28 interviews, 62 documents) with quantitative precision (R²=0.62 explanatory models)—provides irrefutable evidence that negotiation bottlenecks, not technical project factors, constitute the primary constraint on infrastructure delivery.
The authors emphasize three critical insights for policymakers:
1. Negotiations are not merely transactional—they are institutional games: The dominance of distributive bargaining tactics (75% adversarial interactions) reflects deeper power asymmetries and capacity imbalances rather than strategic choices. Without addressing these root causes through NIE-informed reforms, Tanzania risks perpetuating a cycle of suboptimal outcomes that drain fiscal resources and deter foreign investment.
2. Sectoral nuances demand tailored interventions: The transport sector's relative success (TICTS achieving VfM through integrative pivots) versus energy's fiscal disasters (IPTL's USD 200M liabilities) and housing's termination crisis (29% failure rate) demonstrates that one-size-fits-all policies fail. Reforms must incorporate sector-specific risk matrices, stakeholder configurations, and technical complexities.
3. Short-term wins can catalyze long-term transformation: The proposed phased implementation—pilot training programs reducing drafting delays by 55% within 2 years, followed by legislative overhauls creating unified authorities by 2028—offers a pragmatic roadmap that balances urgency with sustainability.
By 2030, if these reforms are implemented, Tanzania could transform its PPP portfolio from 25 struggling projects to a robust ecosystem generating:
The study's contribution extends beyond Tanzania, offering Africa-centric theoretical advances that challenge Eurocentric PPP paradigms. By foregrounding informal institutional norms (patronage, hierarchy) alongside formal rules, the research enriches New Institutional Economics and provides a replicable analytical framework for SADC neighbors facing similar negotiation challenges.
The conclusion is unequivocal: Tanzania stands at a developmental crossroads. The choice is binary—invest in institutional reforms that transform adversarial negotiations into collaborative partnerships, or accept continued infrastructure deficits that undermine Vision 2025's middle-income ambitions. Resilient negotiations are not optional luxuries; they are existential necessities for sustainable development in the Global South.
📘 Read the Full Research Paper:
"The Dynamics of Negotiation in Tanzania's PPP Projects: Institutional Challenges and Policy Implications"
Authored by David Kafulila and Dr. Bravious Felix Kahyoza (PhD, FMVA)
Published by TICGL | Tanzania Investment and Consultant Group Ltd
🌐 www.ticgl.com