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Decentralisation of the Economy in Tanzania
February 20, 2026  
Decentralisation of the Economy in Tanzania: A Comprehensive 2026 Analysis | TICGL Home › Economic Research › Decentralisation of the Economy in Tanzania (2026) Research Report — Updated Edition Decentralisation of the Economy in Tanzania A comprehensive, data-driven analysis of Tanzania's fiscal architecture — incorporating the January 2026 TICGL/REPOA corrections and the latest macroeconomic data […]
Decentralisation of the Economy in Tanzania: A Comprehensive 2026 Analysis | TICGL
Research Report — Updated Edition

Decentralisation of the Economy in Tanzania

A comprehensive, data-driven analysis of Tanzania's fiscal architecture — incorporating the January 2026 TICGL/REPOA corrections and the latest macroeconomic data covering 2004/05 to 2025/26.

📅 Coverage: 2004/05 – 2025/26 🗓 Updated: February 2026 🏢 TICGL | NBS | MoF | World Bank | AfDB | IMF 📍 Tanzania Mainland — 185 LGAs
70% of national taxes from DSM
15.3% DSM share of national GDP
4.6× DSM tax efficiency ratio
45% of GDP informal
TZS 14.1T annual tax shortfall
6.0% GDP growth projected 2025
01

Introduction & Policy Background

Decentralisation of the economy in Tanzania refers to the systematic devolution of fiscal, administrative, and political powers from the central government to Local Government Authorities (LGAs). Formally known as Decentralisation by Devolution (D-by-D), this policy framework is designed to bring government services closer to citizens, foster regional economic development, and reduce the structural dominance of Dar es Salaam as Tanzania's singular economic hub.

Tanzania mainland has 185 LGAs supervised by the President's Office — Regional Administration and Local Government (PO-RALG/TAMISEMI). A landmark January 2026 study by the Tanzania Investment and Consultant Group Ltd. (TICGL), jointly disseminated with researchers at REPOA (Research on Poverty Alleviation), provides the most up-to-date and precise quantification of the geographic concentration of Tanzania's tax economy — and reveals a structural paradox that defines the decentralisation debate.

Core Policy Question

If 84.7% of Tanzania's GDP is produced outside Dar es Salaam, why does Dar es Salaam account for approximately 70% of all national tax revenue? The answer — and its implications for genuine economic decentralisation — is the central focus of this report.

Table 1: Key Macroeconomic Indicators — Tanzania (2020–2025/26)
Indicator20202021202220232024/252025/26 (Proj.)
Real GDP Growth4.5%4.8%4.7%5.1%5.5%6.0%
National GDP (TZS Trillion)~200~212~221~235~247~261
Tax Revenue (TZS Trillion)~17.5~19.0~22.4~25.0~29.2~32.3
Tax-to-GDP Ratio~11.5%~12.1%~12.8%~13.0%~14.9%~13.3% (target)
Budget Deficit (% of GDP)-3.6%-3.5%-3.5%-3.4%-3.4%-3.0%
Total National Budget (TZS Tn)~34~36.6~38.5~44.4~49.35~56.49
Source: NBS Tanzania; Bank of Tanzania; Ministry of Finance (2025/26 Budget); TICGL (2026); World Bank
📈 Tanzania Real GDP Growth Trend (2020–2026 Projected)
💰 National Budget vs Tax Revenue (TZS Trillion)
02

Critical Data Correction: Dar es Salaam Tax Revenue Share

The TICGL study published in January 2026 — assessed by The Citizen (February 13, 2026) and co-disseminated with REPOA — provides updated and more precise figures for Dar es Salaam's contribution to national tax revenue. This corrects an older figure that had been widely circulated in policy discussions.

✅ TICGL/REPOA Verified Figure — January 2026

The TICGL/REPOA study, confirmed by researcher Amran Bhuzohera at the February 2026 forum on contemporary tax research, establishes that Dar es Salaam accounts for approximately 70% of Tanzania's national tax revenue — a precise, data-verified figure based on TRA revenue statistics and NBS regional GDP data.

Why This Still Matters

Even at the corrected 70% figure, the geographic mismatch between where taxes are collected and where economic activity actually occurs is a defining structural problem of Tanzania's economy. Dar es Salaam produces just 15.3% of national GDP but accounts for 70% of tax revenue — a 4.6x over-contribution ratio explained by headquarters-based taxation.

Table 2: Corrected Regional GDP and Tax Revenue Distribution (2023–2025 Data)
Region / ZoneGDP (TZS Trillion)GDP ShareTax Revenue ShareTax Efficiency RatioStatus
Dar es Salaam36.0 (2023 est.)15.3%~70%4.6× (over-contributes)Highly Centralised
All Other Regions (29+)~199 (84.7%)84.7%~30%0.35× (under-contributes)Structurally Marginalised
Lake Zone (Mwanza, Shinyanga, etc.)~48.0 est.~20.4%Low (taxed via DSM HQs)Very LowMining, HQ-taxed
Northern Zone (Arusha, Kilimanjaro)~38.0 est.~16.2%Low-ModerateLowTourism & Agriculture
Southern Highlands (Mbeya, Iringa)~35.0 est.~14.9%LowVery LowAgriculture, under-taxed
Central Zone (Dodoma, Singida)~28.0 est.~11.9%Very LowVery LowLow Formalisation
Coastal/Southern Zone (Mtwara, Lindi)~20.0 est.~8.5%LowVery LowGas sector, HQ-taxed
Source: TICGL/REPOA Study (January 2026); NBS Regional GDP Data (2023); TRA Revenue Statistics; The Citizen (February 13, 2026)
🗺 GDP Share by Region: DSM vs Rest of Tanzania
🏦 Tax Revenue Collection: DSM vs Rest of Tanzania

Tax Efficiency Ratio by Zone (Tax Revenue Share ÷ GDP Share)

Dar es Salaam
4.6× — Extreme Over-Contribution
Lake Zone
~0.15×
Northern Zone
~0.22×
Southern Highlands
~0.14×
Central Zone
~0.09×
Coastal/Southern
~0.10×

A ratio above 1.0 means the region contributes more taxes than its GDP share warrants. Below 1.0 means the region's actual economic output is effectively being taxed via Dar es Salaam headquarters.

2.1

Why This Happens: Headquarters-Based Taxation

The TICGL study, presented by researcher Amran Bhuzohera at a February 2026 forum on contemporary tax research, explains the mechanism clearly: Tanzania's tax system requires companies to file and remit taxes through their registered head offices. Since the overwhelming majority of large corporations — including mining companies operating in Mwanza and Geita, tourism operators based in Arusha, and agricultural exporters from Mbeya — register their headquarters in Dar es Salaam, all their national revenue flows through the city's tax registration.

The Statistical Illusion

This creates a statistical illusion: Dar es Salaam appears to be the engine of the economy from a revenue perspective, when in reality it is primarily a tax registration hub. The actual economic production — the mines, farms, lodges, and factories — occurs hundreds or thousands of kilometres away, in regions that receive little of the fiscal dividend from that production.

TZS 36Tn DSM actual GDP (2023 est.)
TZS ~183Tn GDP registered to DSM via HQ taxation
3.7× GDP per capita: DSM vs Simiyu
185 LGAs structurally disadvantaged
03

Fiscal Transfers from Central Government to LGAs

Central government transfers remain the primary funding mechanism for LGAs, covering 85–90% of their total budgets. The 2025/26 national budget — at TZS 56.49 trillion, an 11.6% increase from the prior year — continues the trend of growth in nominal transfer volumes. However, high conditionality and earmarking of these transfers severely limit LGA fiscal autonomy, undermining the spirit of decentralisation.

Structural Paradox

TRA has exceeded its revenue collection targets for two consecutive years (achieving 103% of targets), yet Tanzania maintains a persistent budget deficit of 3.0–3.6% of GDP. The answer lies not in collection efficiency but in the structural narrowness of the tax base and high recurrent expenditure growth.

Table 3: Central Government Fiscal Transfers to LGAs (2020/21 – 2024/25)
Fiscal YearCentral Transfers (TZS Bn)% of LGA BudgetNational Domestic Revenue (TZS Bn)LGA Own-Source Revenue (TZS Bn)
2020/21~18,00085–90%21,8281,147
2021/22~20,00085–90%23,013~1,200
2022/23~22,50085–90%27,921~1,250
2023/2422,02688%29,4541,147
2024/2524,629 (to Mar. 2025)90%32,4921,356
Source: Ministry of Finance Budget Speeches; Economic Survey 2024; PO-RALG Reports; TICGL (2025)
📊 Central Transfers vs LGA Own-Source Revenue (TZS Billion)
📈 National Domestic Revenue Growth Trend
04

LGA Revenues and Expenditures

LGA own-source revenues remain critically underdeveloped, averaging just TZS 1,100–1,356 billion annually — less than 6% of national tax receipts. Meanwhile, LGA total expenditures have grown from TZS 26.6 trillion in 2020/21 to an estimated TZS 42.75 trillion in 2024/25, funded almost entirely by central transfers. The result is near-total fiscal dependency and a rising share of recurrent spending that crowds out development investment.

Table 4: LGA Revenues and Expenditures (2020/21 – 2024/25)
Fiscal YearOwn-Source Rev. (TZS Bn)Recurrent Exp. (TZS Bn)Development Exp. (TZS Bn)Total Exp. (TZS Bn)Exp. as % of Own Revenue
2020/211,14714,88411,70226,586129% (deficit)
2021/22~1,200~16,000~12,500~28,500124%
2022/23~1,250~18,000~13,000~31,000111%
2023/241,14721,93114,63636,567124%
2024/25 (est.)1,356~27,398~15,354~42,752131% (est.)
Source: Economic Survey 2024; Budget Execution Reports; PO-RALG Quarterly Reports (2025)
Table 5: LGA Expenditure Composition Trend
Expenditure Category2020/21 Share2024/25 ShareTrend
Recurrent (wages, admin, services)~55%~64%Rising
Development (infrastructure, capital)~45%~32–36%Declining
Revenue collection vs. targets47–53% of target~72% of target (Mar. 2025)Improving
Source: PO-RALG; Budget Execution Reports (2025)
📉 LGA Expenditure Mix: Recurrent vs Development (%)
📊 LGA Own-Source Revenue vs Total Expenditure (TZS Bn)
05

The Informal Economy: Tanzania's Hidden Fiscal Challenge

One of the most significant findings of the TICGL 2026 study is the sheer scale of Tanzania's informal economy and its direct impact on both the tax base and the effectiveness of economic decentralisation. Informality is the root cause of the narrow tax base — not inefficient TRA collection. The informal sector represents a massive missed fiscal opportunity, particularly in non-DSM regions where formality rates are lowest.

~45% of GDP is informal
TZS 105.7Tn absolute informal economy value
TZS 14.1Tn annual tax shortfall from informality
TZS 223.4Tn mobile money transactions (2025)
5–7% of informal transactions digitally captured
72% of surveyed SMEs operate informally
Table 6: Tanzania's Informal Economy — Key Metrics (2025)
MetricValue (2025)Source / Note
Informal economy as % of GDP~45% of GDPTICGL/REPOA 2026
Informal economy — absolute valueTZS 105.7 trillion (~$41.2 billion)TICGL 2026
Annual tax shortfall from informalityTZS 14.1 trillion~45% of total tax revenue
Share of informal transactions captured digitally5–7% onlyDespite mobile money growth
Mobile money transactions (2025)TZS 223.4 trillion~95% of annual GDP
Uncollected potential taxes (other regions)TZS 20+ trillionTICGL 2026 estimate
SMEs operating informally to avoid compliance~72% of surveyed SMEsTICGL survey of 250 SMEs, 5 regions
Tanzania informal economy vs. EAC peers2nd largest in EACAfter Zimbabwe in sub-region
DSM alone — informal GDPTZS 6.2 trillion22.5% of city GDP; undercounted by TZS 2.3Tn
Source: TICGL 'Will Informality Remain Tanzania's Economic Shock Absorber?' & 'Why Tanzania Must Expand Its Tax Base' (2026); REPOA; World Bank
The Mobile Money Paradox

Tanzania processed TZS 223.4 trillion in mobile money transactions in 2025 — nearly 95% of annual GDP — yet only 5–7% of informal sector transactions are captured in the tax system. This represents the single largest untapped fiscal opportunity for genuine decentralisation: if even 20% of mobile money transactions could be brought into the tax net, it would add approximately TZS 4.5 trillion annually to government revenues.

💸 Tax Shortfall Decomposition — Where Is the Missing Revenue? (TZS Trillion)
06

Sectoral Contributions to National GDP

Tanzania's GDP is diversified across multiple sectors, but a critical structural issue emerges when examining where economic activity occurs versus where taxes are registered. Agriculture remains the largest sector at 28.7% of GDP (2023) but is largely informal and under-taxed. Mining produced a significant peak in 2022 (9.8% of GDP), yet the sector's taxes flow entirely through Dar es Salaam headquarters.

Table 7: Sectoral GDP Contributions — Tanzania (2021–2023) with Tax Registration Status
Sector2021 (%)2022 (%)2023 (%)Where Activity OccursTax Registered Where?
Agriculture (incl. Livestock & Fisheries)27.0%26.0%28.7%All regions (esp. Southern Highlands)Local / Largely Informal
Construction & Infrastructure16.0%15.0%14.5%Nationwide + DSMDSM (Central Govt)
Wholesale & Retail Trade9.0%9.0%9.0%All regionsMostly DSM HQs
Transport & Communications8.0%8.0%8.0%NationwideDSM HQs
Manufacturing & Industry9.0%8.4%9.0%DSM, Mwanza, ArushaDSM HQs
Mining & Quarrying5.0%9.8%5.0%Lake Zone, Lindi, MtwaraDSM HQs (key issue)
Tourism & Hospitality5.7%6.0%7.0%Northern & Lake ZonesDSM HQs (partly)
Financial Services~7.0%~7.0%15.4% 🚀DSM dominantDSM
Source: Bank of Tanzania; NBS. ⚡ Mining peak Q3 2022. 🚀 Financial services Q1 2025 growth rate.
🏭 Sectoral GDP Share (2023)
📈 Sectoral GDP Trends 2021–2023 (Selected Sectors)
07

SME Tax Burden and Its Impact on Decentralisation

SMEs are Tanzania's economic backbone — contributing approximately 35% of national GDP and employing over 6 million people across all regions. Yet the TICGL 2026 analysis reveals that the tax architecture is systematically undermining SME growth, with cascading negative effects on regional economic development and LGA own-source revenue generation.

Key Finding: Corporate Tax vs. Rwanda Model

Tanzania's corporate tax rate for SMEs is 30% — among the highest in East Africa. Rwanda, by contrast, has adopted a 3% turnover tax for SMEs, which generated over 60% compliance growth. This single policy difference helps explain why Rwanda's tax-to-GDP ratio significantly exceeds Tanzania's.

Table 8: SME Tax Burden — Key Findings from TICGL Survey of 250 SMEs (2025/26)
FindingData PointImplication for Decentralisation
High tax rates as primary growth obstacle78% of SMEsDiscourages formalization across all regions
Tax filing procedures rated excessively complex76% of SMEsRural LGAs lack support infrastructure
SMEs operating informally to avoid compliance72% of SMEsDirectly shrinks regional tax bases
Annual hours spent on tax compliance248 hours/year avg.SMEs need external consultants; rural areas lack access
Combined tax burden (typical DSM SME)>18% of annual revenueCorp. tax + VAT + municipal levies
SMEs reducing staff due to tax strain56% of SMEsUnemployment concentrated in regional towns
SME contribution to national GDP~35%Backbone of regional economies, yet under-supported
Corporate tax rate (Tanzania)30%Among highest in EAC; Rwanda SMEs pay 3% turnover tax
VAT pending refunds (2025)TZS 1.4–1.5 trillion (~$650M)Cash flow crisis for exporters and capital-intensive businesses
Source: TICGL 'How Tax Law Burden Affects SME Growth' (February 2026); TICGL 'Heavy Tax Burden on Tanzanian SMEs' (2025)
📊 SME Pain Points — % of Surveyed SMEs Reporting Each Issue
⚖ Corporate Tax Rate Comparison: EAC Countries
08

Impact on Service Delivery

Despite the structural fiscal challenges, Tanzania's decentralisation framework has delivered some meaningful improvements in service delivery metrics — particularly in education enrolment and health coverage. However, quality indicators lag significantly, and the declining share of LGA development expenditure threatens to reverse hard-won gains.

Table 9: Key Service Delivery Outcomes — Decentralisation Record
IndicatorBaselineLatest (2024/25)Change
Primary school enrolment4.8M (2001)10.6M (2019)+121%
Community Health Fund households543,328 (2012/13)2,251,055 (2017/18)+315%
LGA revenue collection efficiency47–53% of targets~72% of target (Mar. 2025)Improving
Teacher quality / infrastructureLow / InadequateRemains low / inadequateStagnant
PPP / development project disbursement~60% historical47.4% hit rate (2023/24)Deteriorated
2025/26 education allocationTZS 444.7 billion (fee-free)Sustained
2025/26 healthcare allocationTZS 414.7 billionSustained
Source: NBS; UNICEF/PO-RALG; TICGL; Ministry of Education; Ministry of Finance Budget 2025/26
Notable Progress

Primary school enrolment has more than doubled since 2001 (+121%), and the Community Health Fund has expanded nearly 5-fold since 2012/13. The 2025/26 budget sustains TZS 444.7 billion for fee-free education and TZS 414.7 billion for healthcare — demonstrating the central government's continued commitment to social service delivery even amid fiscal pressures.

09

Digital Tax Reform: IDRAS — A New Opportunity for Decentralisation

A significant development announced in January 2026 is the Integrated Digital Revenue Administration System (IDRAS) by TRA. This system represents the most concrete technology-based opportunity to reform the geographic concentration of tax collection and dramatically expand Tanzania's tax base — particularly in rural and regional LGAs where informal sector activity is highest.

Table 10: IDRAS Digital Tax System — Features and Projected Impact
IDRAS FeatureDetails & Projected Impact
Real-time integrationLinks TRA, banks, BRELA, and mobile money platforms to track economic activity across all regions in real time.
Mobile-first filing (USSD + apps)SMEs can file in under 10 minutes without external consultants. Critical for rural LGAs with low ICT infrastructure.
AI-powered risk analyticsIdentifies high-risk non-compliance while reducing harassment of compliant businesses — addressing a key SME grievance.
M-Pesa / Tigo Pesa / Airtel Money integrationInstant tax payments remove barriers for informal sector operators. Key to capturing part of the TZS 223.4 trillion mobile money economy.
Comparator outcomes (Kenya iTax / Rwanda e-Filing)Countries with similar systems saw 20–35% increase in registered taxpayers within 3 years of implementation.
Potential if Tanzania reaches Rwanda tax-to-GDP parity+2.1–3.4 percentage points improvement — equivalent to TZS 4.5–7.3 trillion in additional annual revenue.
Source: TICGL 'Why Tanzania Must Expand Its Tax Base' (February 2026); TRA IDRAS Announcement (January 2026)
📱 Tax-to-GDP Ratio Comparison: Tanzania vs EAC/Africa Peers & IDRAS Potential
IDRAS: The Reform Multiplier

If IDRAS implementation reaches rural LGAs by 2027 as projected, and Tanzania closes even half the gap to Rwanda's e-filing compliance rates, the system could generate an estimated TZS 4.5–7.3 trillion in additional annual tax revenue — equivalent to 30–50% of current LGA total own-source revenue. This alone would represent a transformational shift in LGA fiscal capacity.

10

Key Challenges in Tanzania's Economic Decentralisation

Despite positive macroeconomic momentum, Tanzania's decentralisation framework faces ten interconnected structural challenges. These challenges are deeply rooted in the architecture of the tax system, the scale of informality, and the governance constraints on LGA fiscal autonomy. The TICGL 2026 research identifies and quantifies each challenge with current data.

🕸 Structural Challenge Severity Map (Score 1–10)
📊 Regional GDP per Capita Disparity (TZS Million, est.)
Table 11: Summary of Structural Challenges with Updated Data
ChallengeData EvidenceSource
HQ-based taxation (geographic mismatch)70% of taxes from DSM (15.3% of GDP); 70% of GDP produced elsewhereTICGL/REPOA 2026
Narrow tax baseTax-to-GDP: 14.9% vs SSA avg 18.6%; deficit persists despite 103% TRA target achievementTICGL / MoF 2025
Massive informal sector45% of GDP (TZS 105.7Tn) outside formal structures; TZS 14.1Tn annual tax shortfallTICGL/REPOA 2026
High LGA fiscal dependency85–90% of LGA budgets from central transfers; own-source = <6% of national taxesPO-RALG / MoF 2025
Recurrent vs. development squeezeRecurrent spending: 55% (2020) → 64% (2025) of LGA total; development decliningBudget Exec. Reports
SME over-taxationCombined burden >18% of revenue; 78% cite taxes as top obstacle; 72% operate informallyTICGL 250-SME Survey 2026
VAT refund crisisTZS 1.4–1.5 trillion in pending refunds; avg wait 12–24 months vs. statutory 30 daysTICGL / EY 2025
Conditional grant restrictionsMost transfers earmarked; LGAs cannot reallocate to local prioritiesPO-RALG 2024
Uncollected regional taxesTZS 20+ trillion in potential taxes uncollected in non-DSM regionsTICGL/REPOA 2026
Regional per capita disparityDSM: TZS 5.7M vs Simiyu: TZS 1.5M — a 3.7× gapNBS / World Bank 2023
Source: TICGL (2026); REPOA; PO-RALG; Ministry of Finance; NBS Tanzania; EY Tanzania Tax Survey 2025
The Core Paradox

TRA consistently exceeds its revenue collection targets — achieving 103% of targets for two consecutive years — yet Tanzania maintains a persistent budget deficit. The problem is not TRA's collection capacity. It is the structural narrowness of the tax base: the majority of economic activity remains outside the formal tax net, concentrated in regions that lack the administrative infrastructure to bring it in.

11

Opportunities for Strengthening Decentralisation

Against the backdrop of structural challenges, the TICGL 2026 research identifies nine high-impact opportunities that could fundamentally transform Tanzania's fiscal decentralisation landscape. These range from digital technology (IDRAS) and natural resource revenue devolution to infrastructure-driven regional integration via the SGR and JNHPP.

🚀 Strategic Opportunities — Estimated Revenue / Benefit Potential (TZS Trillion)
Table 12: Strategic Opportunities — Updated with TICGL 2026 Intelligence
OpportunityData / EvidenceProjected Benefit
IDRAS Digital Tax SystemAnnounced Jan 2026; mobile-first filing; AI risk analytics60–70% compliance burden reduction; expands regional tax base
Mobile Money Tax CaptureTZS 223.4 Tn in transactions (2025); only 5–7% capturedCapturing 20% would add ~TZS 4.5 trillion to revenue
SME Formalisation Drive72% of SMEs informal; TZS 20+ Tn uncollected outside DSMRegional tax base expansion; LGA own-source revenue growth
Regional HQ IncentivesRelocate company registrations to producing regionsRedirect tax receipts to where economic activity occurs
Mining Revenue SharingGold exports +42.1% to USD 4.7B (2025); taxed via DSM HQsRoyalties routed directly to Mara, Shinyanga, Geita LGAs
Tourism Revenue Devolution2.3M visitors (2025); revenue +37%; Arusha/Lake Zone-basedLGA-level tourism levies and dedicated development funds
Nyerere Hydropower (JNHPP)Power sector grew 19% in Q1 2025Enables industry outside DSM; reduces urban concentration
SGR Rail + DSM Port ExpansionPort to double cargo capacity by 2032; SGR links inland regionsPeripheral LGAs gain market access; reduces DSM-dependency
Natural Gas (Ntorya / Lindi-Mtwara)25-year licence; 40 mmcfd projected outputMtwara, Lindi LGAs: direct revenue uplift from gas royalties
Source: TICGL (2026); Bank of Tanzania; TIC; AfDB; TanzaniaInvest (2025)
+42.1% Gold export growth (2025)
2.3M Tourist arrivals (2025)
+37% Tourism revenue growth (2025)
+19% Power sector growth Q1 2025
40 mmcfd Ntorya gas projected output
2032 DSM Port capacity doubling target
12

GDP Growth Projections (2025–2027)

All major international institutions project accelerating GDP growth for Tanzania through 2026, underpinned by infrastructure investment, agricultural resilience, tourism recovery, and prudent fiscal management. The TICGL estimate adds an additional reform premium: if the fiscal decentralisation reforms recommended in this report are implemented, Tanzania could add 0.5–1.0 percentage points above the baseline consensus forecast.

📈 Tanzania GDP Growth Forecasts by Institution (2024–2026) — TICGL Reform Scenario Highlighted
Table 13: Tanzania GDP Growth Forecasts — Major Institutions
Institution2024 (Actual)2025 (Forecast)2026 (Forecast)Key Drivers
World Bank5.5%6.0%6.4%Infrastructure, Agriculture
IMF5.5%6.1%7.0%Structural Reforms
African Development Bank5.7%6.0%6.5%Agriculture, Tourism, Industry
Bank of Tanzania5.5%6.0%+6.0%+Domestic demand, FDI
Ministry of Finance (Budget Target)5.5%6.0%6.0%+Budget 2025/26 projection
🏆 TICGL Estimate (with decentralisation reforms)5.5%6.0–6.5%6.5–7.5%+0.5–1.0pp from LGA fiscal reform
Source: IMF WEO; World Bank Tanzania Overview; AfDB African Economic Outlook; MoF Tanzania Budget Speech 2025/26; TICGL (2026)
Vision 2050 Context

Tanzania's government has articulated a Vision 2050 target of a USD 1 trillion economy. At the current 5.5–6.0% growth rate, achieving this target remains a multi-decade challenge. With genuine fiscal decentralisation reforms unlocking the potential of all 185 LGAs, TICGL estimates an additional 0.5–1.0 percentage points of annual GDP growth — compounding significantly over 25 years and materially accelerating the Vision 2050 timeline.

13

Policy Recommendations

Drawing on the TICGL 2026 research findings and the broader data presented in this report, the following eight evidence-based reforms are recommended to achieve genuine economic decentralisation in Tanzania. Each recommendation is directly tied to a quantified data finding.

📊 Projected GDP Growth Contributions from Each Reform Pillar
Rec. 1 — Reform Headquarters-Based Taxation

Require companies to register and file taxes in the regions where their primary economic activity occurs. This single reform could begin to address the 70%/15.3% mismatch between DSM's tax contribution and GDP share, redirecting revenue to producing regions.

High Impact Medium Complexity
Rec. 2 — Accelerate IDRAS Implementation

Prioritise rural and regional LGA rollout of IDRAS (announced January 2026), with particular focus on mobile-first USSD filing for SMEs and informal traders. Target: 50% of non-DSM LGAs integrated by end of 2027.

High Impact Low Complexity
Rec. 3 — Tax the Mobile Money Economy

Develop a simple, low-rate levy for the TZS 223.4 trillion mobile money ecosystem, capturing at least 15–20% of transactions in the tax net (vs. the current 5–7%). Estimated revenue uplift: TZS 4.5 trillion annually.

High Revenue Requires Design
Rec. 4 — Reduce the SME Tax Burden

Lower corporate tax for SMEs from 30% to 15–20% and simplify compliance — following Rwanda's model (3% turnover tax) which generated 60%+ compliance growth. Target: reduce informal SMEs from 72% to below 40% by 2028.

High Impact Revenue Neutral Long-term
Rec. 5 — Increase Intergovernmental Transfers

Increase fiscal transfers to LGAs to at least 30–35% of national revenue (from ~20%), and reduce the proportion of conditional grants to give LGAs genuine fiscal autonomy to respond to local priorities.

Medium Impact Budget Pressure
Rec. 6 — Regional Equalisation Fund

Introduce a dedicated Regional Equalisation Fund targeting Simiyu, Kagera, Singida, and Dodoma — the regions most deprived relative to the national average — to begin closing the 3.7× GDP per capita gap between DSM and the poorest regions.

Equity Impact Medium Complexity
Rec. 7 — Resolve the VAT Refund Crisis

Implement TRA's proposed 30-day processing target by 2026 and introduce real-time tracking — clearing TZS 1.4–1.5 trillion in pending refunds that are constraining export businesses and capital-intensive SMEs across all regions.

Quick Win Low Complexity
Rec. 8 — Expand the Tax Base to SSA Average

Raise the tax-to-GDP ratio from 14.9% to 18%+ through formalization incentives, digital enforcement, and sector-specific reforms — particularly in agriculture (28.7% of GDP but largely undertaxed) and the financial services sector.

High Revenue Long-term Programme
14

Conclusion

The January 2026 TICGL/REPOA study represents a significant advancement in our understanding of Tanzania's economic decentralisation challenge. Its most important contribution is the corrected and more nuanced reading of Dar es Salaam's role: the capital is not simply the dominant economic engine — it is primarily a tax registration hub, collecting taxes on behalf of economic activity that occurs across all 29+ regions of the country.

This is not primarily a story of Dar es Salaam's economic dominance — it is a story of headquarters-based taxation and a structurally narrow tax base. Mining revenues from Mwanza, agricultural exports from Mbeya, and tourism receipts from Arusha are all flowing through Dar es Salaam's tax registers rather than into the treasuries of the LGAs where the economic activity actually takes place. This single structural feature arguably does more to undermine genuine decentralisation than any other policy failure.

The Fiscal Paradox Summarised

TRA consistently exceeds its revenue collection targets (103% for two consecutive years), yet Tanzania maintains a persistent budget deficit. The answer lies not in collection inefficiency but in the structural narrowness of the tax base: TZS 105.7 trillion in informal economic activity, TZS 20+ trillion in uncollected regional taxes, and TZS 223.4 trillion in mobile money transactions — of which only 5–7% are captured in the tax system.

Implemented together, the reforms recommended in this report could lift Tanzania's GDP growth by an additional 0.5–1.0 percentage points annually, accelerate the journey toward the Vision 2050 USD 1 trillion economy target, and — most critically for decentralisation — begin to channel fiscal resources to the regions that generate the underlying wealth but currently receive little of the fiscal dividend.

+1.0 pp Max additional GDP growth from reforms
USD 1Tn Vision 2050 economy target
185 LGAs that stand to benefit
TZS 7.3Tn Max annual revenue uplift from IDRAS

Sources & Methodology

This report was prepared for research and educational purposes by the Tanzania Investment and Consultant Group Ltd. (TICGL). Key sources: TICGL/REPOA (January 2026); The Citizen (February 13, 2026); NBS Tanzania; Ministry of Finance; World Bank; African Development Bank; Bank of Tanzania; PO-RALG; IMF. Data covers fiscal years 2004/05 through 2025/26. Regional GDP estimates are TICGL calculations based on NBS methodology. Tax revenue data sourced from TRA Revenue Statistics and MoF Budget Execution Reports.

About the Authors

This report was researched and authored by TICGL's senior economics team. The findings have been peer-reviewed and presented at international research forums, including the February 2026 Contemporary Tax Research Forum.

BK

Dr. Bravious Felix Kahyoza

PhD  |  FMVA  |  CP3P

Chief Economist & Research Director

Dr. Kahyoza leads TICGL's macroeconomic research division, specialising in fiscal policy, public finance, and investment climate analysis for Sub-Saharan Africa. He holds a PhD in Economics and professional certifications in Financial Modelling & Valuation (FMVA) and Public-Private Partnerships (CP3P).

🎓 PhD Economics  |  FMVA  |  CP3P
🏢 Tanzania Investment & Consultant Group Ltd.
🔬 Specialisation: Fiscal Policy, Public Finance, FDI
AB

Amran Bhuzohera

Senior Economist & Research Lead

Senior Economist & Research Lead

Amran Bhuzohera leads TICGL's applied tax research programme, focusing on Tanzania's revenue architecture, SME formalisation, and economic decentralisation. He presented the TICGL/REPOA findings on headquarters-based taxation at the February 2026 Contemporary Tax Research Forum, drawing significant policy attention to the corrected Dar es Salaam tax revenue figures.

🎓 Economics & Tax Policy Research
🏢 Tanzania Investment & Consultant Group Ltd.
🔬 Specialisation: Tax Reform, SME Policy, Decentralisation
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Tanzania Investment and Consultant Group Ltd. (TICGL)
Independent economic research, investment intelligence, and policy advisory services for Tanzania and the East African region. Jointly affiliated with REPOA for this study.
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💬 Suggested Share Message

"70% of Tanzania's tax revenue is collected in Dar es Salaam — yet the city produces just 15.3% of national GDP. TICGL's landmark 2026 decentralisation report reveals the structural paradox and charts a reform pathway. Read the full analysis: https://ticgl.com/"

📖 How to Cite This Report

Kahyoza, B.F. & Bhuzohera, A. (2026). Decentralisation of the Economy in Tanzania: A Comprehensive, Data-Driven Analysis. Tanzania Investment and Consultant Group Ltd. (TICGL) / REPOA. Dar es Salaam, February 2026. Available at: https://ticgl.com/

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