Aligning TIC, LGAs, TRA, and PPPC with Vision 2050’s 8-10% GDP Growth Target
May 28, 2025
Tanzania Vision 2050 aims to transform the nation into a middle-income, semi-industrialized economy by 2050, targeting 8-10% annual GDP growth to support a projected population of over 114 million. The Tanzania Investment Centre (TIC), Local Government Authorities (LGAs), Tanzania Revenue Authority (TRA), and Public-Private Partnership Centre (PPPC) play pivotal roles in achieving this ambition. This […]
Tanzania Vision 2050 aims to transform the nation into a middle-income, semi-industrialized economy by 2050, targeting 8-10% annual GDP growth to support a projected population of over 114 million. The Tanzania Investment Centre (TIC), Local Government Authorities (LGAs), Tanzania Revenue Authority (TRA), and Public-Private Partnership Centre (PPPC) play pivotal roles in achieving this ambition. This analysis evaluates how effectively these institutions align their efforts with the GDP growth target and explores inter-institutional collaborations to drive industrialization and poverty reduction, using key figures to highlight their contributions and challenges.
Tanzania’s GDP growth averaged 6.5% annually (2015-2024, World Bank), below the 8-10% target needed to triple economic output by 2050 to sustain per capita income for 114 million people. Each institution’s alignment is assessed based on current performance and scalability.
Tanzania Investment Centre (TIC)
Contribution: TIC drives industrialization by attracting FDI. In 2023, TIC secured $6.2 billion in FDI, creating 150,000 jobs and boosting manufacturing/agro-processing exports by 12% annually (2020-2024). Vision 2050 requires $50 billion in FDI to achieve 8-10% GDP growth, contributing ~3% to growth via industrial output.
Effectiveness: Moderately high. FDI supports GDP but is below the $2 billion/year needed to hit $50 billion by 2050. Bureaucratic delays (60% project operationalization rate) limit impact.
Figure: $6.2 billion FDI (2023) vs. $50 billion target (2050).
Local Government Authorities (LGAs)
Contribution: LGAs support local economies through service delivery and revenue mobilization. Their 5% share of national revenue (~$0.46 billion in 2024) funds small-scale agriculture and SMEs, contributing ~1% to GDP growth via rural productivity. Scaling to 10% revenue share could add 0.5% to growth.
Effectiveness: Low. Limited revenue and staffing (40% positions filled in some regions) constrain contributions. Urban LGAs support industrial zones, but rural impact is minimal.
Contribution: TRA’s $9.26 billion revenue (12.5% tax-to-GDP ratio, 2024) funds 60% of the budget, including infrastructure like the Standard Gauge Railway, adding ~2% to GDP growth via public investment. A 20% tax-to-GDP ratio by 2050 could fund a $100 billion budget, contributing 3-4% to growth.
Effectiveness: High. Digitalization (80% business compliance) supports scalability, but the informal sector (40% of GDP) limits revenue.
Figure: 12.5% tax-to-GDP (2024) vs. 20% target (2050).
Public-Private Partnership Centre (PPPC)
Contribution: PPPC’s $3 billion in PPPs (2020-2024) supports infrastructure (e.g., Dar es Salaam Port), adding ~1% to GDP growth via improved trade. Scaling to $20 billion by 2050 could contribute 2% to growth through urban infrastructure for 60% urbanization.
Effectiveness: Moderate. Slow execution (10 projects completed, 2020-2024) hinders impact, but potential is high with regulatory reforms.
Figure: $3 billion PPPs (2020-2024) vs. $20 billion target (2050).
Collective Alignment
Current GDP Impact: TIC (~3%), TRA (~2%), PPPC (~1%), and LGAs (~1%) contribute ~7% to GDP growth, slightly below the 8-10% target. Gaps in execution and scale limit effectiveness.
2. Inter-Institutional Collaborations for Industrialization and Poverty Reduction
Industrialization and poverty reduction are core to Vision 2050, requiring job creation, infrastructure, and inclusive growth. Inter-institutional collaborations can bridge gaps and amplify impact. Below are key collaborations with figures.
Collaboration 1: TIC-TRA for Industrial Investment and Revenue
Strategy: TIC offers tax incentives (e.g., 5-year tax holidays) for manufacturing, while TRA ensures compliance and reinvests revenue into industrial zones. TIC targets $50 billion FDI, and TRA raises tax-to-GDP to 20%.
Industrialization Impact: Attracts 1,000 new factories by 2050, creating 5 million jobs (50% urban, 50% rural), boosting industrial GDP share from 25% to 40%.
Poverty Reduction: Jobs reduce poverty from 25% to 10%, as each job supports ~5 people (NBS 2024). Rural agro-processing cuts rural poverty (currently 30%).
Figure: $50 billion FDI + $37 billion TRA revenue = $87 billion investment pool by 2050.
Collaboration 2: PPPC-LGAs for Industrial Infrastructure
Strategy: PPPC develops PPPs for industrial parks (e.g., $1 billion Bagamoyo SEZ), while LGAs provide land and local services. PPPC scales to 50 projects/year, and LGAs increase revenue to $2.6 billion.
Industrialization Impact: 100 industrial parks by 2050, employing 2 million workers and increasing exports by 20% annually.
Poverty Reduction: Infrastructure improves rural market access, lifting 10 million rural poor (15% of current rural population).
Strategy: TRA simplifies SME taxation (e.g., flat 3% rate for small businesses), and LGAs provide training and market access. TRA targets 20% informal sector formalization, and LGAs scale SME support to 1 million businesses.
Industrialization Impact: SMEs contribute 30% to industrial output by 2050, up from 20%, supporting light manufacturing.
Poverty Reduction: 1 million SMEs employ 5 million workers, reducing urban poverty (currently 15%) by 50%.
Figure: 200,000 formalized SMEs by 2035, generating $5 billion in revenue.
Collaboration 4: TIC-PPPC for Private Sector Innovation
Strategy: TIC attracts tech FDI (e.g., $5 billion in ICT), and PPPC facilitates PPPs for digital infrastructure. TIC targets 10% FDI in tech, and PPPC develops 20 digital PPPs by 2050.
Industrialization Impact: Tech sector adds 1% to GDP growth, supporting Industry 4.0 and 500,000 skilled jobs.
Poverty Reduction: Digital access empowers 20 million rural youth with e-commerce and skills, cutting youth poverty (30% in 2024).
TIC and TRA are highly effective, contributing 3% and 2% to GDP growth, but need to scale FDI and revenue to meet the 8-10% target. PPPC (score 6) and LGAs (score 4) lag due to execution and resource constraints but have potential with reforms. Inter-institutional collaborations—linking TIC-TRA for investment, PPPC-LGAs for infrastructure, TRA-LGAs for SMEs, and TIC-PPPC for innovation—can drive industrialization (40% GDP share) and reduce poverty to 10%.