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TICGL | Economic Consulting Group
Overview of Tanzania's Government Budgetary Operations
March 16, 2026  
Tanzania Government Budgetary Operations March 2026 | TICGL Economic Analysis TICGL Economic Research  |  Tanzania Investment & Consultant Group Ltd  •  Data sourced from Bank of Tanzania  •  FY 2025/26 TICGL Economic Intelligence — March 2026 Overview of Tanzania's Government Budgetary Operations 📅 Fiscal Year 2025/26  (July 2025 – June 2026) 📊 Data: Bank of […]
Tanzania Government Budgetary Operations March 2026 | TICGL Economic Analysis
TICGL Economic Research  |  Tanzania Investment & Consultant Group Ltd  •  Data sourced from Bank of Tanzania  •  FY 2025/26
TICGL Economic Intelligence — March 2026

Overview of Tanzania's Government Budgetary Operations

📅 Fiscal Year 2025/26  (July 2025 – June 2026) 📊 Data: Bank of Tanzania 🔖 Reference Period: December 2025
Domestic Revenue (Dec 2025)
TZS 4,774.6B
▲ +3.0% vs Target
Tax Revenue (Dec 2025)
TZS 3,802.7B
▲ +6.5% vs Target
Total Expenditure (Dec 2025)
TZS 3,671.7B
Monthly Actual
Monthly Fiscal Surplus
TZS +1,102.9B
▲ Revenue > Expenditure
GDP Growth (Q3 2025)
6.4%
▲ Up from 6.1% (Q3 2024)
Cumulative Fiscal Deficit
TZS -4,232.1B
▲ Better than -6,401.2B est.
01

Overview of Government Budgetary Operations

How Tanzania mobilizes revenue and allocates expenditure to support economic development

Government budgetary operations reveal how the state mobilizes revenue and allocates expenditure to support national economic development. In December 2025, Tanzania recorded domestic revenue of TZS 4,774.6 billion against central government revenue of TZS 4,654.3 billion, while total government expenditure stood at TZS 3,671.7 billion. Domestic revenue exceeded the monthly target by approximately 3%, reflecting improved tax administration and sustained economic activity. Cumulatively through December 2025, actual revenue reached TZS 20,182.5 billion against an annual estimate of TZS 40,466.1 billion — a 49.9% collection rate at the halfway point of the fiscal year.

+3.0% Domestic revenue vs monthly target
+6.5% Tax revenue above target
-6.4% Non-tax revenue below target
6.4% GDP growth Q3 2025
3.2% Inflation rate (stable)
Monthly Revenue vs Expenditure (Dec 2025, TZS Billion)
Revenue Target vs Actual (Dec 2025)

02

Central Government Revenue

FY 2025/26 — Budget Estimates vs Actual Collections to December 2025

📋 Central Government Revenue (FY 2025/26)
Revenue CategoryBudget Estimate (TZS Million)Actual Collection to Dec 2025 (TZS Million)Collection Rate (%)
Central Government Revenue36,857,73419,332,58452.4%
Tax Revenue32,175,99915,939,29949.5%
Non-Tax Revenue4,681,7343,393,28472.5%
Tax Revenue (% of total central revenue)82.4%
Non-Tax Revenue (% of total central revenue)17.6%
Annual Budget Collected to December52.4%
Key Finding: Tax revenue accounts for approximately 82% of central government revenue, underscoring Tanzania's reliance on tax-driven income. The 52.4% collection rate at the half-year mark (December = month 6 of 12) indicates slightly above-pace revenue mobilization.
Central Revenue — Budget vs Actual (TZS Million)

03

Composition of Tax Revenue

The four major tax categories driving Tanzania's fiscal income

💰 Breakdown of Tax Revenue (FY 2025/26)
Tax CategoryBudget Estimate (TZS Million)Actual to Dec 2025 (TZS Million)Share of Tax Revenue (%)Collection Rate (%)
Taxes on Imports11,562,9665,907,51737.1%51.1%
Income Tax11,367,8775,631,60735.3%49.5%
VAT & Excise on Local Goods7,016,4713,204,56920.1%45.7%
Other Taxes4,887,7001,195,6067.5%24.5%
Total Tax Revenue32,175,99915,939,299100%49.5%
Tax Revenue Composition — Actual (Donut Chart)
Tax Categories — Budget vs Actual (TZS Million)
🔍 Key Insights: Tax Revenue Performance
Largest Contributor
Taxes on Imports
TZS 5,907.5B actual — 37.1% of total tax revenue. Reflects growing trade volumes and TRA border controls.
Second Largest
Income Tax
TZS 5,631.6B actual — 35.3% share. Strong PAYE collection drives performance alongside corporate tax.
Domestic Consumption
VAT & Excise
TZS 3,204.6B actual — 20.1% share. Domestic consumption taxes signal a growing consumer market.
Underperforming
Other Taxes
TZS 1,195.6B — only 24.5% of annual estimate collected. Requires attention and policy review.

04

Central Government Revenue Performance (December 2025)

Monthly target versus actual collection with variance analysis

📈 Monthly Revenue Performance — December 2025
Revenue SourceTarget (TZS Billion)Actual (TZS Billion)Variance (TZS Billion)Variance (%)
Total Domestic Revenue4,634.14,774.6+140.5+3.0%
Central Government Revenue4,480.64,654.3+173.7+3.9%
Tax Revenue3,571.43,802.7+231.3+6.5%
Non-Tax Revenue909.3851.6-57.7-6.4%
December 2025 — Target vs Actual with Variance Trend (TZS Billion)
💡 Performance Interpretation

Tax revenue exceeded the monthly target by 6.5%, generating an additional TZS 231.3 billion above plan. This performance is attributed to improved administration by the Tanzania Revenue Authority (TRA), stronger border control, and resilient economic activity including a GDP growth rate of 6.4% in Q3 2025 — up from 6.1% in Q3 2024.

Non-tax revenue fell slightly below target by 6.4% (TZS 57.7 billion shortfall), primarily reflecting timing differences in government service charges and fees. While not alarming in isolation, if persistent, this trend could constrain the budget's non-tax revenue base.


05

Central Government Expenditure

Structure of total spending — recurrent vs development (FY 2025/26)

Total Expenditure (Dec 2025)
TZS 3,671.7B
Monthly actual spending
Recurrent Expenditure
TZS 2,643.8B
72.0% of total spending
Development Expenditure
TZS 1,027.8B
28.0% of total spending
🏗️ Total Government Expenditure Breakdown
Expenditure CategoryBudget Estimate (TZS Million)Actual to Dec 2025 (TZS Million)Execution Rate (%)Share of Total (%)
Total Expenditure48,774,90024,904,90051.1%100%
Recurrent Expenditure31,281,30015,303,30048.9%61.4%
Development Expenditure17,493,7009,601,70054.9%38.6%
Recurrent Expenditure (share of total budget)64.1%
Development Expenditure (share of total budget)35.9%
Budget Execution Rate (Total)51.1%
Expenditure Split — Recurrent vs Development
Budget vs Actual Expenditure (TZS Million)

06

Composition of Recurrent Expenditure

Wages, debt servicing, and operational costs — FY 2025/26 to December

📊 Recurrent Expenditure Breakdown
CategoryBudget Estimate (TZS Million)Actual to Dec 2025 (TZS Million)Execution Rate (%)Share of Recurrent (%)
Wages and Salaries10,917,4676,480,28059.4%42.3%
Interest Payments (Debt Service)6,493,7153,107,51747.9%20.3%
Goods, Services & Transfers7,088,6075,715,52780.6%37.4%
Recurrent Expenditure Composition (Actual TZS Million)
Recurrent — Budget vs Actual (TZS Million)
🧩 Key Observations

Wages and Salaries represent the single largest item, consuming 42.3% of recurrent spending (TZS 6,480.3B actual). A 59.4% execution rate at mid-year indicates that the government is broadly on-track for its wage bill.

Interest Payments at TZS 3,107.5B reflect Tanzania's growing debt servicing obligations, particularly on domestic government securities. The 47.9% execution rate suggests the peak of debt service may fall in H2 2025/26.

Goods, Services & Transfers show an 80.6% execution rate — the highest of all categories — suggesting that operational government expenditures are front-loaded or that transfers to agencies and beneficiaries occurred early in the fiscal year.


07

Development Expenditure

Financing infrastructure, energy, water and social sectors for long-term growth

🚀 Development Expenditure — FY 2025/26
IndicatorBudget Estimate (TZS Million)Actual to Dec 2025 (TZS Million)Execution Rate (%)
Total Development Expenditure17,493,7009,601,70054.9%
🛣️
Infrastructure
Roads, railways, ports — backbone of economic connectivity
Energy Projects
Hydropower & renewable energy expansion supporting industry
💧
Water Supply
Rural and urban water infrastructure for productivity gains
🏫
Education & Health
School & hospital construction building human capital
Vision 2050 Alignment: Development expenditure of TZS 9,601.7B to December is on pace (54.9% execution at mid-year), supporting Tanzania's industrialization agenda. Development spending contributes an estimated 1.0–1.5 percentage points to GDP growth annually.

08

Fiscal Balance

Monthly surplus and cumulative deficit — financing mechanisms and sustainability

⚖️ Fiscal Balance — December 2025 Monthly
Total Revenue (Dec 2025)
TZS 4,774.6B
Domestic revenue collected
Total Expenditure (Dec 2025)
TZS 3,671.7B
Total government spending
Monthly Fiscal Balance
+TZS 1,102.9B
Revenue exceeded expenditure ✓
Prudent Fiscal Management: In December 2025, revenue exceeded expenditure by TZS 1,102.9 billion — indicating that Tanzania is collecting sufficient revenues to cover its monthly spending needs without requiring additional borrowing in this specific month.
📉 Cumulative Fiscal Balance — To December 2025
Fiscal IndicatorAnnual Estimate (TZS Billion)Actual to Dec 2025 (TZS Billion)Performance
Balance Before Grants-8,308.9-4,722.5Better than estimate
Grants Received1,069.9490.445.8% of estimate
Overall Balance After Grants-6,401.2-4,232.1▲ Better by TZS 2,169.1B
Domestic Net Financing2,952.62,302.5Efficient borrowing
Foreign Net Financing4,286.31,913.5Below estimate (risk mitigation)
Fiscal Balance — Estimate vs Actual (TZS Billion, Cumulative to Dec 2025)
🏦 Deficit Financing Mechanisms

Tanzania's fiscal deficit of TZS 4,232.1 billion is financed through two primary channels:

🏠 Domestic Financing (TZS 2,302.5B)

Primarily through government securities — Treasury Bills and Treasury Bonds. In January 2026, securities issuance mobilized TZS 263.7 billion. Bond auctions have been oversubscribed (e.g., 34% for 10-year bonds), signalling strong investor confidence and enabling low-yield borrowing at approximately 11.30% for bonds.

🌍 Foreign Financing (TZS 1,913.5B)

Foreign financing at TZS 1,913.5B is well below the TZS 4,286.3B estimate, reflecting deliberate efforts to reduce reliance on external borrowing. This reduces Tanzania's exposure to foreign exchange risk amid global uncertainties.

Debt Sustainability Note: Tanzania's debt-to-GDP ratio stands at approximately 40.6% — within manageable levels. Stable inflation at 3.2% and a relatively stable Tanzanian Shilling support continued investor confidence in government securities.

09

Government Revenue & Expenditure Structure Summary

December 2025 consolidated snapshot

📋 Monthly Consolidated Summary (December 2025)
IndicatorAmount (TZS Billion)Interpretation
Central Government Revenue4,654.3Above monthly target
Tax Revenue3,802.7+6.5% vs target — strong performance
Non-Tax Revenue851.6-6.4% vs target — slight shortfall
Total Government Expenditure3,671.7Within budget
Recurrent Expenditure2,643.872.0% of total spending
Development Expenditure1,027.828.0% of total — growth-oriented
Comprehensive Revenue & Expenditure Dashboard (TZS Billion, Dec 2025)

10

Economic Implications for Growth & Development

How budgetary operations shape Tanzania's 2026 economic trajectory

🌍 Economic Context

Tanzania's GDP expanded at 6.4% in Q3 2025 (up from 6.1% in Q3 2024), driven by agriculture (26% of GDP), mining, and infrastructure investment. Budgetary operations financed via the securities market play a pivotal role in sustaining the projected 6.0–6.3% GDP growth for 2026, funding critical infrastructure including hydropower and transport networks while reducing fiscal pressures through domestic mobilization.

Oversubscribed bond auctions (TZS 840 billion in bids in January 2026) enable low-yield borrowing at approximately 11.30% for bonds, keeping debt sustainable (debt-to-GDP ~40.6%) and freeing resources for productive sectors. Employment creation of approximately 160,000 new jobs in 2025 reflects the positive multiplier effect of government development spending.

Implication CategoryPositive Impact on Growth/DevelopmentPotential RisksLink to Securities Market
REVENUE
Revenue Mobilization
Strong tax collection (+6.5% above target) supports fiscal sustainability, enabling 6.4% Q3 growth via public investment. Improving TRA administration broadens the revenue base.Non-tax shortfalls (-6.4%) strain budgets if persistent. Over-reliance on import taxes creates vulnerability to trade shocks.Revenue surpluses fund securities repayment, enhancing market confidence and reducing rollover risk for government borrowing.
SPENDING
Expenditure Allocation
Development spending (TZS 9,601.7B actual) drives infrastructure, estimated to add 1–1.5% to GDP annually. Aligns with Vision 2050 industrialization strategy.Recurrent dominance (61% of total) diverts from productive uses, risking debt service spikes and constraining capital formation for private sector growth.Securities finance deficits (TZS 2,302.5B domestic), with low bond yields reducing the cost of development project financing.
BALANCE
Fiscal Balance
Smaller-than-estimated deficit (-TZS 4,232.1B vs -6,401.2B estimate) aids macroeconomic stability, attracting FDI toward the USD 15B target for 2026.External financing reliance (TZS 1,913.5B) exposes the budget to foreign exchange risk and shifts in donor/creditor confidence.Oversubscription (34% for 10-year bonds) signals investor resilience, mobilizing TZS 263.7B in January 2026 alone to fill budget gaps.
GROWTH
Overall Growth
Enables self-reliant development, projecting 6.5–6.9% medium-term GDP growth amid global uncertainties. Strong domestic revenue (~80% tax-driven) reduces aid dependency.Inequality if benefits skew urban; unemployment (13.4%) persists without diversification beyond agriculture and mining into manufacturing and services.Deepens financial markets (~15% GDP), recycling domestic savings into productive growth projects and building Tanzania's capital market infrastructure.
GDP Growth Trend — Tanzania Q3 2024 vs Q3 2025
Deficit Financing Sources (TZS Billion)
Conclusion

Data from the Bank of Tanzania report confirms that Tanzania's government relies heavily on tax revenue as the main source of income (~80% of central government revenue), with recurrent expenditure dominating total spending through wages, interest payments, and operational costs.

The fiscal deficit of TZS 4,232.1 billion (better than the TZS 6,401.2B estimate) demonstrates improving fiscal discipline, supported by strong tax performance and deliberate reduction in foreign borrowing. Development expenditure continues to finance critical infrastructure aligned with Vision 2050 goals.

Overall, Tanzania's government continues to align expenditure with available revenue resources while maintaining fiscal stability — supported by a deepening domestic securities market and sustained investor confidence. Revenue diversification and deficit control remain the critical levers for sustaining and accelerating growth toward the 6.5–6.9% medium-term GDP projection.

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