Introduction: A Structural, Not Cyclical, Deficit
Tanzania's budget deficit is not a temporary fiscal imbalance driven by short-term shocks. Rather, it reflects deep structural dynamics within the country's public finance system. Despite consistent improvements in revenue collection — particularly by the Tanzania Revenue Authority (TRA) — the fiscal gap persists at around 3–4% of GDP annually, signaling that the deficit is rooted more in expenditure rigidity, debt dynamics, and institutional fiscal design than in revenue underperformance alone.
This comprehensive analysis examines the paradox at the heart of Tanzania's fiscal challenge: TRA achieves 100.5% to 108.4% of its collection targets, yet the government budget remains structurally inadequate. Three interlocking forces explain this phenomenon — extensive expenditure obligations consuming 68.3% of the budget for recurrent costs, substantial debt servicing absorbing over 16% of revenues, and weak Local Government Authority (LGA) revenues failing to match the scale of economic activities in their jurisdictions.
Narrow Tax Base
Tax-to-GDP at 12.9% vs. 16% SSA average. Every 1pp increase = TZS 2.7–3.0T extra revenue.
Rigid Recurrent Spending
47.2% of budget committed to wages + interest before a single service is delivered.
Debt Servicing Drain
TZS 7.8 trillion in annual debt service. For every TZS 6 collected, TZS 1 goes to creditors.
Weak LGA Revenue
185 LGAs collect only TZS 1.36T/yr, just 2.8% of the national budget, despite hosting 40–50% of GDP activity.
Ambitious Development Agenda
SGR, JNHPP, Vision 2050 commitments require sustained capital outlay beyond fiscal space.
Even with TRA collecting TZS 82.6 billion above target in H1 2024/25, Tanzania still faces a budget deficit of 3.4% of GDP — a TZS 1.68 trillion shortfall — demonstrating that revenue performance alone cannot bridge the gap created by structural expenditure pressures.
Historical Budget Deficit Trend: Tanzania 1991–2030
Historically, Tanzania's fiscal balance has averaged approximately –3% to –5% of GDP over the past three decades, with peaks of widening deficits during periods of heavy infrastructure investment and external shocks. Early surpluses in the mid-1990s gave way to persistent deficits following liberalization, with the deepest trough in 2010 (–4.74%) following the global recession. Recent fiscal consolidation has narrowed the gap, but structural forces keep it above the EAC's 3% convergence criterion.
Recent years show a pattern of structural persistence rather than cyclical volatility:
| Year | Budget Balance (% GDP) | Trend | Period Context |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1991 | +0.61% | ▲ Surplus | Pre-liberalization |
| 1992 | –4.96% | ▼ Deficit | Liberalization shock |
| 1996 | +1.57% | ▲ Surplus | ESAP stabilization |
| 2004 | –2.43% | ▼ Deficit | Infrastructure push |
| 2009 | –4.46% | ▼ Deficit | Global recession |
| 2010 | –4.74% | ▼ Deepest | Post-recession spending |
| 2017 | –1.14% | ▲ Narrowest | Revenue reforms |
| 2022 | –3.92% | ▼ Deficit | COVID-19 recovery |
| 2023 | –3.67% | ▼ Deficit | Expenditure pressure |
| 2024 | –3.03% | ~ Stable | Consolidation |
| 2025 (proj.) | –2.98% | ▲ Improving | Fiscal reform |
| 2026 (proj.) | –3.02% | ~ Stable | Budget expansion risk |
| 2027–30 (proj.) | ~–3.0% | ~ Flat | Structural floor |
The East African Community (EAC) sets a maximum fiscal deficit of 3% of GDP as a convergence criterion. Tanzania has exceeded this threshold in 2021/22, 2022/23, and 2024/25, reflecting the structural nature of the fiscal gap.
Revenue Performance: Strong but Structurally Insufficient
Over the past two fiscal years, revenue performance has improved significantly. The Tanzania Revenue Authority (TRA) exceeded annual targets by approximately 3–4 percent. Yet this achievement conceals a deeper paradox: the national revenue base itself remains structurally narrow relative to the size of government commitments.
| Period | Target (TZS T / B) | Actual Collection | Achievement | Above Target |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| FY 2023/24 (Full Year) | TZS 28.9T | TZS 29.8T | 103.1% | +TZS 0.9T |
| FY 2024/25 (Full Year) | TZS 31.5T | TZS 32.26T | 103.0% | +TZS 0.76T |
| July 2024 (Monthly) | TZS 2.247T | TZS 2.347T | 104.5% | +TZS 100B |
| January 2025 (Monthly) | ~TZS 3.57T | TZS 3,877B | 108.6% | +TZS 307B |
| H1 2024/25 (Jul–Dec) | TZS 14,874.9B | TZS 15,111.6B | 101.6% | +TZS 236.7B |
| May 2025 (Monthly) | ~TZS 2.79T | TZS 2,880B | 103.1% | +TZS 86.9B |
Even in January 2025 — when TRA achieved 108.6% of its monthly target — total revenues could not cover expenditure of TZS 3,806B, and the annual deficit remained at 3.4% of GDP. The structural gap is expenditure-driven, not a revenue collection failure.
The Tax-to-GDP Structural Gap
The core structural issue lies in Tanzania's tax-to-GDP ratio, which remains at approximately 12–13 percent. This falls short of multiple key benchmarks:
Note: Bar width scaled proportionally to 26.4% upper bound for display clarity.
Therefore, even when TRA exceeds its internal targets, the national revenue base itself remains structurally narrow relative to the size of government commitments. Closing this gap requires formalizing the informal economy — estimated at 50–65% of GDP and outside the tax net — rather than merely improving compliance within the existing base.
| Indicator | Tanzania (2024/25) | Benchmark | Gap | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tax-to-GDP Ratio | 12.9% | 15% minimum | –2.1 pts | ⚠ Below target |
| Budget Deficit | 3.4% of GDP | 3% (EAC) | +0.4 pts | ⚠ Above EAC |
| Debt-to-GDP | 47.3% | 55% max | 14.4% buffer | ✅ Within limit |
| Interest Payments (% Revenue) | >16% | <10% ideal | +6 pts | 🔴 High burden |
| Development Expenditure % | 31.3% | 30–35% | On target | ✅ On target |
| Wage Bill % of Budget | 32.5% | <35% | Near ceiling | ⚠ Near limit |
Recurrent Expenditure Rigidity
A central structural driver of the deficit is the dominance of recurrent expenditure in the national budget. In FY2024/25, recurrent expenditure accounted for approximately 65–69% of total spending, leaving limited space for development investment or fiscal adjustment.
| Category | FY2024/25 (TZS T) | % of Total | FY2025/26 (TZS T) | Nature |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Recurrent Expenditure | 20.75 | 68.7% | 38.6 | Non-discretionary |
| — Wages & Salaries | 9.83 | 32.5% | ~12.5 | 🔒 Fixed / Political |
| — Interest Payments | 4.45 | 14.7% | ~5.0 | 🔒 Contractual |
| — Other Charges | ~6.47 | 21.4% | ~21.1 | Partially flexible |
| Development Expenditure | 9.44 | 31.3% | 16.4 | Policy-driven |
| TOTAL EXPENDITURE | 30.19 | 100% | ~55.0 | — |
47.2% of the entire budget (wages TZS 9.83T + interest payments TZS 4.45T = TZS 14.28T) is committed to fixed obligations before any government services are delivered or development projects funded. This leaves only 52.8% for operations, social services, and development — creating constant fiscal pressure.
| Expenditure Type | Amount (TZS T) | Reason It's Mandatory |
|---|---|---|
| Wages & Salaries (32.5%) | 9.83 | Public sector employment; politically sensitive — not reducible short-term |
| Debt Servicing (14.7%) | 4.45 | Contractual obligations; defaulting has severe credit & reputation consequences |
| Development Budget Mandate (31.3%) | 9.44 | Government policy commits 30–40% to development for growth targets |
| Fee-free Education Policy | ~3.0 | Constitutional commitment; essential social service |
| Infrastructure (SGR, JNHPP) | ~5.0 | Vision 2025/2050 multi-year contracts already signed |
| Elections (2024/2025) | ~1.0 | Constitutional requirement — unavoidable |
This means that nearly half of all government expenditure (wages + interest) is effectively non-discretionary. When fixed obligations consume nearly 47–50% of the budget before service delivery expansion or new development priorities are considered, fiscal flexibility becomes structurally constrained. Any increase in revenue tends to be absorbed by rising wage costs, inflation-indexed spending, or debt servicing adjustments.
